Jump to content

T-Mobile LTE & Network Discussion


CriticalityEvent

Recommended Posts

It depends on where I am. What's glaring the drop from LTE to nothing. I was walking through Grand Central and my phone was sitting pretty on Emergency Calls only while my Sprint phone had 3G. 

 

It all comes down to site placement, and power output.

 

That's exactly what I was saying when I got to try T-Mobile for a day. There were 0 problems outdoors but once I got inside it took a turn for the worst pretty quickly. You'd drop from LTE to nothing so quickly whereas on Sprint, I'd at least have a decent EVDO signal. Coupled with so many of the 3G sites in NYC having fiber backhaul already, speeds would constantly be 1-1.2 Mbps.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

That's exactly what I was saying when I got to try T-Mobile for a day. There were 0 problems outdoors but once I got inside it took a turn for the worst pretty quickly. You'd drop from LTE to nothing so quickly whereas on Sprint, I'd at least have a decent EVDO signal. Coupled with so many of the 3G sites in NYC having fiber backhaul already, speeds would constantly be 1-1.2 Mbps.

Surprised you didn't get Hspa at least

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Surprised you didn't get Hspa at least

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

 

I did but it isn't a very strong signal at all. One example I can recall is when I was at my mother's workplace and as I walked into the building, Sprint managed to keep a 1 bar LTE signal whereas the T-Mobile device dropped LTE quickly and when it switched to HSPA+ it was 1 bar and then it switched to EDGE which had a stronger signal but not by much. Meanwhile Sprint managed to keep LTE. When I went back outside, both device had a full signal on LTE.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I did but it isn't a very strong signal at all. One example I can recall is when I was at my mother's workplace and as I walked into the building, Sprint managed to keep a 1 bar LTE signal whereas the T-Mobile device dropped LTE quickly and when it switched to HSPA+ it was 1 bar and then it switched to EDGE which had a stronger signal but not by much. Meanwhile Sprint managed to keep LTE. When I went back outside, both device had a full signal on LTE.

^^^ is why TMO's business foray is doomed.

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Surprised you didn't get Hspa at least

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

When I tried T-Mobile a few weeks ago, I would usually go from LTE to GSM or no service. I rarely ever saw hspa. LTE was pretty fast, but if I lost it data was unusable.

 

Sent from my Nexus 5 using Tapatalk

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Delicious words

 

Interestingly, Son also addressed T-Mobile's recent "uncarrier" efforts in the market, and the carrier's recent resurgence in terms of new subscribers. He said T-Mobile's success is a short term phenomenon and that "we need a real fight, not a pseudo fight."

 

http://www.fiercewireless.com/story/softbanks-son-cca-carriers-we-need-fight-back/2014-03-27

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Delicious words

 

Interestingly, Son also addressed T-Mobile's recent "uncarrier" efforts in the market, and the carrier's recent resurgence in terms of new subscribers. He said T-Mobile's success is a short term phenomenon and that "we need a real fight, not a pseudo fight."

 

http://www.fiercewireless.com/story/softbanks-son-cca-carriers-we-need-fight-back/2014-03-27

This is a year old.  I am sure it has already been posted.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

It's quaint that even he thought tmobile's uncarrier is a short term phenomena.

 

Define "short term."  Orange is the new black.  Something will be the new magenta.  T-Mobile's 15 minutes will not last forever.

 

AJ

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

It's quaint that even he thought tmobile's uncarrier is a short term phenomena.

Now I'm not a fanboy or anything. I am here for knowledge and understanding what is going on in my Sprint market. 

 

You however are a fanboy and clearly only want to point out tmobile.  I don't get it. Trolling a website full of people like myself.  I disagreed with allowing a tmobile discussion thread for items such as this.

  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Define "short term."  Orange is the new black.  Something will be the new magenta.  T-Mobile's 15 minutes will not last forever.

 

AJ

 

Well... on twitter Neal was sayin that fcc should fix up the 2.5ghz by splitting into 100mhz fdd and rest tdd.

100fdd is plenty for att, vzw, tmo

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Personally, I've had a similarly good experience in Norwalk, Stamford, and Rochester. Even traveling between Norwalk and Rochester was quite smooth, as I had native access throughout nearly all of my trip up to Rochester and back down to Norwalk last week.

 

I wonder if they have the backhaul scaled up significantly, or something else is going on. I rarely see low speedtests, and that's using multiple servers, and not T-Mobile's own private "Speedtest.net" server.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It won't say band 12 but a easy way of knowing is if it does say band 4. If you need to know just open the engineering screen on the nexus 6 while connected or download LTE Discovery.

Does Signal Check Pro report T-Mobile's LTE B12? I'm wondering if it'll show once I get the band enabled on my Nexus 6 after the 5.1 update.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I wonder if they have the backhaul scaled up significantly, or something else is going on. I rarely see low speedtests, and that's using multiple servers, and not T-Mobile's own private "Speedtest.net" server.

TMO doesn't have one anymore in Detroit.

Wonder why they dropped it.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Funny thing is, 2.5 ghz is labeled TDD worldwide, so that is going to work.

Actually, 2.5GHz is generally allocated for FDD technologies, with the major exception of the China and Japan. Technically, the U.S. allows both, but the licensing configuration makes it tough to roll out FDD unless you want to mix BRS and EBS.

 

In most countries, they follow the preferred ITU Option (option 1), which is set up as follows:

  • 2495-2500 MHz is a guard band for ISM, MSS, and BAS
  • 2500-2570 / 2620-2690 MHz is paired for FDD operation (3GPP band 7)
  • 2570-2620 MHz is allocated for TDD operation (3GPP band 38, but band 41 service can run here too)
  • Internal guards at 2570-2575 MHz and 2615-2620 MHz are recommended to prevent interference

This configuration is known as the "IMT Extension" configuration, as it was originally designated for high capacity 3G networks (which is why you can deploy UMTS WCDMA on it). But it is now known as the "IMT Advanced" band, where high capacity 4G networks are to be deployed.

 

Most countries following Option 1 do not bother with allocating the TDD frequencies. In CEPT countries, TDD frequencies are allocated because CEPT recommends it. CITEL (for the Americas) and APT (for Asia and Oceania) do not make the same recommendation, though they do recommend Option 1 configuration.

 

The U.S., China, and Japan technically follow Option 3, which permits mixed FDD and TDD throughout the band, and only mandates a 1MHz guard between ISM/MSS/TLPS/BAS and the 2.6GHz band, so instead of starting at 2495MHz, it starts at 2496MHz (which is why there have been issues launching LTE service on the BRS 1 block). However, China and Japan have set up their allocations and regulatory environment so that significant Band 7 allocations are still possible (though they haven't been done yet). The U.S.' confusingly split regulatory environment makes it difficult (though not impossible) to launch FDD service there.

 

Now, that being said, while 2.6GHz is recommended worldwide under Option 1, 2.3GHz (2300-2400 MHz) is recommended as an all-TDD band. CITEL, CEPT, and APT all recommend 2.3GHz for TDD service, which is designated as Band 40 for LTE. This is live all over Asia and Africa. Latin America and Europe are starting Band 40 deployments now. The U.S. is the only country where it is FDD only, and only a small subset of the band has been allocated for mobile services. That mainly has to do with Sirius XM doing things it shouldn't be doing with its SDARS frequencies (which sit in part of that band) and being permitted to do so. Consequently, WCS is currently set up as an FDD band, but with some work, it could be converted into a TDD band.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Actually, 2.5GHz is generally allocated for FDD technologies, with the major exception of the China and Japan. Technically, the U.S. allows both, but the licensing configuration makes it tough to roll out FDD unless you want to mix BRS and EBS.

 

Will any reconfig + re-auction happen here?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Define "short term."  Orange is the new black.  Something will be the new magenta.  T-Mobile's 15 minutes will not last forever.

 

AJ

 

TMO wouldn't be building out to 300mil LTE if they weren't veeeerry confident of their future.

Confidence != actual results, as the Nextel purchase shows, but you don't see Sprint building to 300mil; that difference aught to mean something.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest
This topic is now closed to further replies.

  • large.unreadcontent.png.6ef00db54e758d06

  • gallery_1_23_9202.png

  • Similar Content

  • Posts

    • 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....
    • Welcome back! That's similar to my best (1250ish). A few people have broken 2000 on good sites. 
    • Lots of new multi-carrier nodes popping up in Bushwick. Crown Castle Fiber node at Ridgewood & Palmetto:   Crown Castle Solutions node at Irving & Jefferson:   Crown Castle Solutions node at Wilson & Noll:  
    • I’m surprised they’re running a 5x5 Band 66 carrier still. In NYC T-Mobile has 25x25 AWS and they’re running 20x20 Band 66 and 5x5 n66 (in testing). Presumably when n66 commercially launches they’ll drop Band 66 down to 15x15 and go straight for a 10x10 n66 carrier like they did with n25. 
    • Austin has now narrowed B2 to 15x15 to support a second 10x10 n25 channel, this time entirely in PCS A-F. So T-Mobile now has 35x35 FD (n71 + n25) and 180 MHz TD (n41) NR live here, and LTE single carrier bandwidth now tops out at 15x15. LTE is down to 5x5 B12, 15x15 B2, 10x10+10x10+5x5 B66, so they now have 5 carriers each of LTE and NR, with 45x45 total LTE.
  • Recently Browsing

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