Jump to content

PRL 61092


prophead

Recommended Posts

Just downloaded PRL #61092 this morning. Can anybody tell me what changed between this and 61091?

 

I'm hoping this opens up 800mhz SMR for voice (which Shentel told me should start working around new year)

 

Thanks for any info!

 

PS.... this is on a DuraXT

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Sprint has national PRLs they don't deal with the madness of regional ones. They already have enough madness with the crazy number per device and account types and some aren't needed.

 

Google will help you find out how to use qpst with the evo lte

 

Sent from a little old Note 2

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hmm.... let's see how well you guys are at reading:

 

Geo:11 SID/NID 22435/65535 Sprint Nextel - Baltimore MD; Cumberland MD; Hagerstown MD Added with:

Pref RoamInd:None EVDO-Enabled:Yes

1X: S/476 S/526

EV-Scan: Sprint(0084:0AC0) P/125 P/150 P/325 P/650 P/50 P/550 P/225 P/675

  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hmm.... let's see how well you guys are at reading:

 

Geo:11 SID/NID 22435/65535 Sprint Nextel - Baltimore MD; Cumberland MD; Hagerstown MD Added with:

Pref RoamInd:None EVDO-Enabled:Yes

1X: S/476 S/526

EV-Scan: Sprint(0084:0AC0) P/125 P/150 P/325 P/650 P/50 P/550 P/225 P/675

this enables smr in the Maryland area!

 

Edit: and evdo roaming?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Leave off the roaming of EVDO. It just means your phone will scan for EVDO while attached to 800SMR on that SID.

 

24010 and 25010 both have this add. Looks like the 55xxx series for the Note2, iPhone5, Photon LTE(or whatever it is called), etc hasn't come out yet. Maybe they will get some SMR loving for the first time.

 

You could have say an S3, EVO LTE, and a iPhone5 all with the latest PRLs and updates. Go in a fringe covered building and the iPhone5 would be roaming or have no signal while the other two would have 800SMR.

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

  • Posts

    • A heavy n41 overlay as an acquisition condition would be a win for customers, and eventually a win for T-Mobile as that might be enough to preclude VZW/AT&T adding C-Band for FWA due to spreading the market too thinly (which means T-Mobile would just have local WISPs/wireline ISPs as competition). USCC spacing (which is likely for contiguous 700 MHz LTE coverage in rural areas) isn't going to be enough for contiguous n41 anyway, and I doubt they'll densify enough to get there.
    • Boost Infinite with a rainbow SIM (you can get it SIM-only) is the cheapest way, at $25/mo, to my knowledge; the cheaper Boost Mobile plans don't run on Dish native. Check Phonescoop for n70 support on a given phone; the Moto G 5G from last year may be the cheapest unlocked phone with n70 though data speeds aren't as good as something with an X70 or better modem.
    • Continuing the USCC discussion, if T-Mobile does a full equipment swap at all of USCC's sites, which they probably will for vendor consistency, and if they include 2.5 on all of those sites, which they probably will as they definitely have economies of scale on the base stations, that'll represent a massive capacity increase in those areas over what USCC had, and maybe a coverage increase since n71 will get deployed everywhere and B71 will get deployed any time T-Mobile has at least 25x25, and maybe where they have 20x20. Assuming this deal goes through (I'm betting it does), I figure I'll see contiguous coverage in the area of southern IL where I was attempting to roam on USCC the last time I was there, though it might be late next year before that switchover happens.
    • Forgot to post this, but a few weeks ago I got to visit these small cells myself! They're spread around Grant park and the surrounding areas, but unfortunately none of the mmwave cells made it outside of the parks along the lake into the rest of downtown. I did spot some n41 small cells around downtown, but they seemed to be older deployments limited to 100mhz and performed poorly.    
    • What is the cheapest way to try Dish's wireless network?  Over the past year I've seen them add their equipment to just about every cell site here, I'm assuming just go through Boost's website?  What phones are Dish native?  
  • Recently Browsing

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