When something claims to be tough our first reaction tends to be "we’ll see about that."

Samsung’s Solid makes much of its strong points – that is, that it’s capable of withstanding a bit of bashing and splashing that would floor less macho mobiles.

But while it’s tempting to test a tough-guy phone to destruction, Samsung’s Solid is pitched more as a mobile built for outdoors enthusiasts and trades people rather than as a phone built for post-Armageddon texting.

A few other manufacturers have introduced ruggedised phones before, but this is Samsung’s first effort. It’s dust- and water-resistant to the IEC IP54 standard, and is encased in shock-resistant thick rubber bodywork. That means it can take splashing, but not total immersion, and will bear dropping but not crushing.

Its design is quite a conventional-looking candybar, and the feature rundown isn’t something to get tech-heads drooling. It has a basic VGA camera panelled into the back, with a photo light that doubles as a flashlight. 

There’s no music player or swappable memory, although there is an FM radio inside. And it’s a dual-band GPRS handset rather than one delivering multimedia goodies at 3G connection speeds.

The Samsung Solid is being sold at an equally un-premium price - £59.99 on O2 Pay As You Go deals, or free on any contract.

Handling

You’re unlikely to buy a basic-but-tough handset for the great outdoors or building site environment for its great gaming facilities or video download playback quality. Which is just as well. This is designed for those who require a simple to use, robust and reliable mobile with no frills.

It measures a not excessively chunky 109(h) x 48(w) x 17.9(d) mm and weighs a surprisingly light-in-the-hand 95g. The hard rubber back panel has a screw-up lock to seal the phone, which is reassuring.

The keyboard design is functional, with large number keys that are curved enough to stand out to the touch and which have good backlighting. A central round navigational D-pad control is easy to thumb too, as are a couple of softkeys below the display and the pair of call and end keys.

As well as its menu negotiating duties, the D-pad is set up in conventional style for five shortcut options: camera, Bluetooth, calendar, text messaging and WAP browser access.

A silver coloured key on either side add a couple of extra quick function options; the left one can switch the speakerphone on or off during calls, while the right one doubles up as the delete key and the flashlight on/off button.

Some larger fingered customers my find this control uncomfortably adjacent to the call end/off button, but you quickly get used to careful pressing. Despite its outdoors and workman aspirations, realistically this is a phone that prefers gloves-off handling.

The screen is disappointing– it’s a 65,536-colour CSTN screen, measuring 128x128 pixels, very basic by 2008 mobile standards, and small against the phone’s bulked up body. Menus look somewhat cramped, graphics are quite basic, and the space available for looking at mobile internet sites or lining up camera shots is very limited.

Not that the camera is likely to be a major concern for users; the VGA (640x480 pixels) snapper is on of the lowest resolution cameras you can currently get on a phone, offering 0.3-megapixels maximum resolution.