Home Videocon Phones You are here Updated : Apr 24, 2015, 5:01 AM Videocon V1428 Specs Released Jul 01, 2011 Display 2.0-inch 220 x 176 px Camera 0.3 MP VGA Main Battery 1800 mAh Description The Videocon V1428 is a dual SIM candybar phone with a 2-inch color display, VGA camera, memory card slot, GPRS, music player and video player. I want it 0 users I have it 0 users I had it 0 users Popular Comparisons The Videocon V1428 is most commonly compared with these phones: Videocon V1428 vs Samsung Galaxy S22 Ultra Specs Compare Display Size: 2.0-inch Resolution: 220 x 176 px, 141 PPI Technology: TFT Hardware Storage expansion: microSDHC Device type: Feature phone Battery Capacity: 1800 mAh Type: User replaceable Camera Rear: Single camera Main camera: 0.3 MP VGA Video recording: Yes Design Features: Numeric keypad, Soft keys, D-Pad Cellular Dual SIM: Yes Multimedia Radio: FM, Stereo Connectivity & Features Bluetooth: Yes Phone features Other features: Voice recording Despite our efforts to provide full and correct Videocon V1428 specifications, there is always a possibility of admitting a mistake. If you see any wrong or incomplete data, please LET US KNOW. If you are interested in using our specs commercially, check out our Phone specs database licensing page. Latest News Motorola Edge 60 promo materials leak showing specs that rival some of Samsung’s midrange stars Carl Pei confirms when to expect the Nothing Phone (3), and it might be sooner than you think A $300 discount makes the Galaxy Tab S9+ the top-tier Samsung tablet you should get TSMC keeps head held high as global industries fear tariffs Motorola continues to promote the April 24th unveiling of the "mouth watering" Razr+ (2025) AT&T's court win against FCC is good news for T-Mobile and Verizon but letdown for customers Popular stories T-Mobile is working on a glitch that caused some customers with AutoPay enabled to be charged twice T-Mobile Tuesdays giveaways may never be the same again T-Mobile might soon make up for one of its most controversial changes of the last couple of years So much for free? T-Mobile's damage control backfires spectacularly Sorry, Los Angeles: AT&T outage will last two months Pricing expected to evolve after T-Mobile acquisitions