Jump to content

Network Vision/LTE - Chicago Market


thesickness069

Recommended Posts

Maybe I'm not educated enough in this category, but how would turning things off cause all this interference?

I looked at my SNR more closely today.  Im sitting here with -81dbM LTE signal, but SNR literally 0, 0.2, 0.4.  It's the lowest I have ever seen, this can't be normal.  Is there something wrong with my device b/c I think we are talking about complete system failure at the point my phone is constantly pulling 0 SNR.  Something that no vendor would ever roll out with or let their consumer be exposed to....right?  Do you think if I took it in again Sprint reps would actually say something besides do a hard reset?

 

Signal.png

Link to comment
Share on other sites

A 1x RSSI of 56? Are you standing right in front of the antenna?

 

Sent from my HTCONE using Tapatalk

Yes, my office is literally 500 feet from a full NV tower, the green one (3G/800/4G).  I can see the tower out my window across the st on the building.  Which is why its so frustrating to have such strong signal and have such dial up ish speeds.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

What is a normal snr reading?

I believe tongboy highlighted this earlier.  I found this in the "bars lie for LTE signal strength" article here on S4GRU.

 

Also another factor for good download speeds is the latency which determines the time taken to connect to the IP-Backhaul and backbone. The RSRP is good measure to find out the signal quantity but for signal quality SNR value needs to be accounted which shows a clean signal . below are the approx ranges for that metric

22 dbm-30dbm--- excellent

11dbm-22ddm--- decent

0dbm- 11 dbm--- bad

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I believe tongboy highlighted this earlier.  I found this in the "bars lie for LTE signal strength" article here on S4GRU.

 

Also another factor for good download speeds is the latency which determines the time taken to connect to the IP-Backhaul and backbone. The RSRP is good measure to find out the signal quantity but for signal quality SNR value needs to be accounted which shows a clean signal . below are the approx ranges for that metric

22 dbm-30dbm--- excellent

11dbm-22ddm--- decent

0dbm- 11 dbm--- bad

 

What is needed is for somebody to run a signal analyzer in the vicinity of a few Sprint sites in Chicagoland, to see whether there is some sort of obvious RF interference. (Where is AJ when we need him? Or rather, where we need him?)  Something is clearly out of whack.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

What is a normal snr reading?

There really isn't a normal reading. The higher the SNR the better off you usually are. Low SNR readings are fairly normal with a weak signal (rsrp of - 115 or so). Stronger signals (rsrp of -80) should have a very high SNR (20db or higher).

 

His snr and rsrp tell me he is seeing a very strong LTE signal but the phones radio is seeing it as almost all noise. That is very unusual.

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

What is needed is for somebody to run a signal analyzer in the vicinity of a few Sprint sites in Chicagoland, to see whether there is some sort of obvious RF interference. (Where is AJ when we need him? Or rather, where we need him?) Something is clearly out of whack.

I agree with you. Something is really wrong. I'm not an expert by any means but I don't see how such a high rsrp can have such a low SNR and be a capacity issue. He is saying it is constant whereas capacity issues would get better late at night.

 

If I didn't have kids and a wife that wouldn't go nuts on the trip I would love a fox hunt and find out exactly what is going on.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

There really isn't a normal reading. The higher the SNR the better off you usually are. Low SNR readings are fairly normal with a weak signal (rsrp of - 115 or so). Stronger signals (rsrp of -80) should have a very high SNR (20db or higher).

 

His snr and rsrp tell me he is seeing a very strong LTE signal but the phones radio is seeing it as almost all noise. That is very unusual.

That's what I am saying, something seems so amiss here there has to be something crazy going on.  And I don't believe its just isolated to a few cell sites in a few locations.  I was saying earlier my SNR can and is between 0-3 all the way on the brown line from Addison to the Loop, a 4 mile stretch, while my LTE signal is strong in the -80dbM to -95dbM range.  That would align further with the theory of the USCC site's interference vs. a small wireless network in some neighborhood is causing interference theory.  Right?

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I agree with you. Something is really wrong. I'm not an expert by any means but I don't see how such a high rsrp can have such a low SNR and be a capacity issue. He is saying it is constant whereas capacity issues would get better late at night.

 

If I didn't have kids and a wife that wouldn't go nuts on the trip I would love a fox hunt and find out exactly what is going on.

Trust me its driving me crazy, and I asked my other friends with Sprint to verify they are seeing the same thing, one who lives in River North and the other in Lakeview.  It's not an isolated situation when you can span miles of differing Chicago neighborhoods there is a macro level systematic failure somewhere.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

That's what I am saying, something seems so amiss here there has to be something crazy going on. And I don't believe its just isolated to a few cell sites in a few locations. I was saying earlier my SNR can and is between 0-3 all the way on the brown line from Addison to the Loop, a 4 mile stretch, while my LTE signal is strong in the -80dbM to -95dbM range. That would align further with the theory of the USCC site's interference vs. a small wireless network in some neighborhood is causing interference theory. Right?

I'm not sure I buy the USCC interference. If they were to interfere Sprint would have to be using USCC band for LTE, which I haven't seen any signs of. If someone posts an LTE engineering screen we can see if Sprint is using a different band for LTE. In particular I would like to see what upload and download channel it is using.

 

Sent from my HTCONE using Tapatalk

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm not sure I buy the USCC interference. If they were to interfere Sprint would have to be using USCC band for LTE, which I haven't seen any signs of. If someone posts an LTE engineering screen we can see if Sprint is using a different band for LTE. In particular I would like to see what upload and download channel it is using.

 

Sent from my HTCONE using Tapatalk

They mystery continues.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

See, I think there are multiple issues. Interference AND capacity issues. I can download at 500kbps on a site at 7pm. Later in my shift, around 3-4am, I'll get ~2mbps, consistently, every night of the week. That would suggest come capacity problems. I can also drive 4 minutes from that slow area, and get 20mbps. So, I don't think it's completely market-wide. I think there are isolated trouble spots (possibly all the spots that share a location with USCC.)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

See, I think there are multiple issues. Interference AND capacity issues. I can download at 500kbps on a site at 7pm. Later in my shift, around 3-4am, I'll get ~2mbps, consistently, every night of the week. That would suggest come capacity problems. I can also drive 4 minutes from that slow area, and get 20mbps. So, I don't think it's completely market-wide. I think there are isolated trouble spots (possibly all the spots that share a location with USCC.)

That does sound like a textbook case of a capacity issue. Is your evdo speed acceptable?

 

Sent from my HTCONE using Tapatalk

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

That does sound like a textbook case of a capacity issue. Is your evdo speed acceptable?

 

Sent from my HTCONE using Tapatalk

In the bad spots, 3G is just as bad. Anytime I have a really good LTE speed, 3G can easily be a 2mbps/1mbps connection which is a great fallback.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

In the bad spots, 3G is just as bad. Anytime I have a really good LTE speed, 3G can easily be a 2mbps/1mbps connection which is a great fallback.

Ok. I understood the problem happening only on lte and fairly constant throughout the day/night. What you are describing is a classic capacity issue. Since it is happening on both evdo and lte it is probably a backhaul issue but it is hard to tell from the phone's airlink alone.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

So, if this is a capacity issue, can it be fixed with turning on a couple more of those shiny fiber lines or is it a spectrum issue with little hope for a short term fix?

 

Sent from my SPH-L710 using Tapatalk

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Capacity would have nothing to do with SNR.

 

Sent from my EVO using Tapatalk

I have seen times when limited backhaul can cause the SNR to fall with all the retransmits that take place. That was on Evdo. You are far more experienced with the rf side than I am so what would cause snr to fall in the PCS band during the day only?

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

So, if this is a capacity issue, can it be fixed with turning on a couple more of those shiny fiber lines or is it a spectrum issue with little hope for a short term fix?

 

Sent from my SPH-L710 using Tapatalk

 

Not until all sites are live 4G with fiber back haul, we won't know if it is in fact a capacity issue with the back haul or the limited spectrum.

 

From my personal experience in San Diego, when a site does go live with 4G and a neighboring site is not live with 4G it does get congested. It will provide 4G coverage for a larger area until neighboring sites does go live.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Can a site be LTE active and not have an upgraded fiber backhaul? Maybe that would explain some terrible speeds. Or, maybe sprint isn't delivering as high of a speed line to the sites that they're leading us to believe.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Can a site be LTE active and not have an upgraded fiber backhaul? Maybe that would explain some terrible speeds. Or, maybe sprint isn't delivering as high of a speed line to the sites that they're leading us to believe.

I don't think so, I think Sprint must have the new backhaul in place in order to active the LTE site.  I think this is the reason those folks in Cyrstal Lake were talking about seeing the NV hardware in place for a year on their towers while they waited out the backhaul delay in Microwave towers before it finally went live.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have seen times when limited backhaul can cause the SNR to fall with all the retransmits that take place. That was on Evdo. You are far more experienced with the rf side than I am so what would cause snr to fall in the PCS band during the day only?

It's not just during the day and whatever this systematic issue we have been speaking about is not just a Loop or city thing.  I went to the south suburbs on Sunday, drove from the Loop down i-57, and tested speed and LTE signal/SNR values the whole way.  Nothing good to report.  SNR was better, not in the 0-2 range, more in the 6-18 range, but speeds were awful.  I tested while on the road and while I was stationary in the South Burbs.  Was connected to strong LTE signals the whole time and never saw above 500K on either LTE or eHRPD.  Most of the LTE download speeds were between 200-400K consistently....on a Sunday evening in the burbs.  Yikes. 

 

Still can't figure it out, something just isn't right here.  It was just a couple months ago everywhere I went my LTE connection was pulling down 2, 5, 7, sometimes even 12MB/s download speeds, day or night, crowded city spots or not.  Its like it just gone.  I think the SNR values are certainly pointing us to the culprit, whatever that may be, but there is something amiss here at the macro level of Sprint's LTE network across the Chicago area.  I mean for Christ sake is 1:15am Monday morning, I'm sitting in my place in Lincoln Park, and thrilled to see a whopping 370K download speed (and 5.6 SNR) with LTE.  That ain't right!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Sorry if this is a dumb question...  but what has changed on the retiring USCC network that it now has problems interfering with Sprint?  Did Sprint push a PRL update to USCC phones to share networks all of a sudden?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.


  • large.unreadcontent.png.6ef00db54e758d06

  • gallery_1_23_9202.png

  • Similar Content

  • Posts

    • Kind of amazing that T-Mobile is still holding onto that speed title despite Verizon all but killing off lowband 5G on their network. While Verizon is mostly being evaluated on mmWave and C-band performance, T-Mobile and AT&T's average 5G speeds include their massive lowband 5G networks that are significantly slower.
    • 5G in the U.S. – Additional Mid-band Spectrum Driving Performance Gains T-Mobile holds on to it's lead in 5G Speed
    • Yup. Very true. We were originally on an Everything Data 1500 Plan, which got Unlimited Minutes thanks to Marcelo's "Loyalty Benefits" offer. We then switched to Unlimited Freedom (with the Free HD add-on that Sprint originally wanted $20/month per line for.... remember that?) because the pricing was better with "iPhone for Life", vs. the "Loyalty Credit" for staying on a Legacy Plan. After that, I ran the numbers and switched us over to Sprint MAX, especially for the international travel benefits. There's absolutely no reason for us to switch to Go5G Plus or Go5G Next if we're going to do BYOD by purchasing from Apple/Samsung/Google directly as we've been doing. These new plans aren't priced for current customers to switch to. They're priced for new customers, where they throw in a free line, etc. It's gone from "Uncarrier" to "Carrier". What a shame.
    • Strange business model that they keep around all these pricing plans. 1000s of plans per carrier is reportedly not uncommon.  Training customer support must be a nightmare. Even MVNOs have legacy plans. A downside of their contract mentality I guess. Best to change contracts during a recession. But then all carriers try to squeeze out legacy plan benefits as they grow old.  
    • Everything "Uncarrier" is becoming "Carrier" again. Because of the Credit Limit that T-Mobile put on our account for no reason at all (and wouldn't change/update the last time I checked all the way up to the CEO), I don't plan on buying/upgrading our iPhones through T-Mobile. I'm going through Apple directly. Looks like I'll be going through Google and Samsung directly for our other lines for upgrades. Also, we're staying on Sprint Max given the ridiculous pricing for Go5G Plus. On Sprint Max, we currently pay for our Plan: $260 for 7 Voice Lines $25 for two Wearable Lines. (One is $10/Month. The other is $15/Month because the AutoPay discount only applies up to 8 lines.) Total: $285/Month vs. Go5G Plus (Per the Broadband Facts "nutrition label" on the T-Mobile Website): https://www.t-mobile.com/commerce/cell-phone-plans $360 - ($5 AutoPay Discount x 7 Voice Lines) = $325 The Watch Plans show as either $12/Month or $15/Month: https://www.t-mobile.com/cell-phone-plans/affordable-data-plans/smartwatches So this is about the same for the wearables as what we're paying now. Overall, it's quite more than we're paying now to switch plans. Ridiculous....
  • Recently Browsing

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...