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yes if its optimized it will work perfectly ;) but in my case the 700 MHz cant be deployed because i live in the exclusion zone

It can still be deployed on exclusion zones.

 

On 1/13 Rancho Palos Verdes Broadcasters, the licensee of KXLA, has entered into a Concurrent Operations Agreement with T-Mobile USA. Pursuant to the Agreement RPVB gives its concurrence for the operations of T-Mobile's 700 MHz A block license within the protected service contour of KXLA.

 

http://www.spectrumgateway.com/t-mobile-700a-spectrum

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It can still be deployed on exclusion zones.

 

On 1/13 Rancho Palos Verdes Broadcasters, the licensee of KXLA, has entered into a Concurrent Operations Agreement with T-Mobile USA. Pursuant to the Agreement RPVB gives its concurrence for the operations of T-Mobile's 700 MHz A block license within the protected service contour of KXLA.

 

http://www.spectrumgateway.com/t-mobile-700a-spectrum

I don't think WNJTV made a agreement with T Mobile
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Is it a noticeable improvement over their existing LTE bands?  In other words, is it optimized in your market?

 

T-Mobile's 700mhz LTE here appears to get similar coverage / prorogation to Verizon / AT&T's 700mhz -- there's no noticeable difference in prorogation that I've observed. It's not like 800mhz LTE.

 

It's hard to tell if 700mhz is an improvement over their existing LTE in everyday use -- because all of the sites / areas they've picked to upgrade so far don't really have existing dead zones or coverage holes from their regular AWS network. (I'm almost never on 700mhz LTE, unless I force my Note 4 onto it).

 

But they've only converted probably 20% of the sites here, and they're all very urban. I'm waiting for them to upgrade some sites in areas where they have coverage gaps, to see if the lower band helps with that. (Particular on the NE side of town -- where they currently don't offer service at all)

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T-Mobile's 700mhz LTE here appears to get similar coverage / prorogation to Verizon / AT&T's 700mhz -- there's no noticeable difference in prorogation that I've observed. It's not like 800mhz LTE.

 

It's hard to tell if 700mhz is an improvement over their existing LTE in everyday use -- because all of the sites / areas they've picked to upgrade so far don't really have existing dead zones or coverage holes from their regular AWS network. (I'm almost never on 700mhz LTE, unless I force my Note 4 onto it).

 

But they've only converted probably 20% of the sites here, and they're all very urban. I'm waiting for them to upgrade some sites in areas where they have coverage gaps, to see if the lower band helps with that. (Particular on the NE side of town -- where they currently don't offer service at all)

All in Grand Rapids?
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All in Grand Rapids?

 

Yes, all of the 700mhz sites I've seen so far have been in Grand Rapids.

 

I haven't been to Muskegon / Holland / Kalamazoo / Lansing for about 8 weeks now, so it's possible some of those have started on upgrades as well -- I can't speak to that just yet.

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All in Grand Rapids?

 

Well, you are in Muskegon, only about 40 miles from Grand Rapids.  Why not just make the short drive down and check it out yourself?  Right, maximus?

 

;)

 

AJ

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Don't have an LTE phone.

 

Your Nexus 5 indicates otherwise.  Regardless, do you have eyes?  You cannot spot new 700 MHz antenna panels?

 

AJ

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Yes, all of the 700mhz sites I've seen so far have been in Grand Rapids.

 

I haven't been to Muskegon / Holland / Kalamazoo / Lansing for about 8 weeks now, so it's possible some of those have started on upgrades as well -- I can't speak to that just yet.

Lansing ch51 will be moving

 

http://transition.fcc.gov/Daily_Releases/Daily_Business/2015/db0107/DA-15-15A1.pdf

 

http://www.spectrumgateway.com/t-mobile-700a-spectrum

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Not sure if this is an accurate indication of the network or just a map error but when you go to 

 

https://maps.eng.t-mobile.com/pcc-customer.php

 

and view Muskegon, MI the map shows no 2g but it does show 3g and LTE.

 

Anyone in Muskegon to check if there's any 2g in a strong lte area?

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Not sure if this is an accurate indication of the network or just a map error but when you go to

 

https://maps.eng.t-mobile.com/pcc-customer.php

 

and view Muskegon, MI the map shows no 2g but it does show 3g and LTE.

 

Anyone in Muskegon to check if there's any 2g in a strong lte area?

The map is borked there.

 

Surprised you didn't figure this out already. ;)

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The map is borked there.

 

Surprised you didn't figure this out already. ;)

I did know but in http://www.t-mobile.com/coverage.html they started filling in the map meaning they starting correctly identifiying the towers there that they took away after the lte 1900 map update.

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I did know but in http://www.t-mobile.com/coverage.html they started filling in the map meaning they starting correctly identifiying the towers there that they took away after the lte 1900 map update.

  there map is still the plain old t mobile map for me lol

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Man T-mobile had a rough week. Sprint takes over 3rd place overall in network reliability, Marcelo makes Legere look somewhat small on Twitter. Then all of a sudden, as if Marcelo himself hit the clusterf%#k button, Tmobile has a massive outage affecting data and calls...

 

Legere this week.... :hide:

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Well, you are in Muskegon, only about 40 miles from Grand Rapids.  Why not just make the short drive down and check it out yourself?  Right, maximus?

 

;)

 

AJ

 

Maybe the question to ask is where in the vicinity of Muskegon does WOW exist since to the best of my knowledge WOW doesn't serve areas outside of Metro Detroit or outer Lansing areas. 

 

http://s4gru.com/index.php?/topic/6794-fcc-commissioner-calls-out-dish-for-designated-entity-bidding-in-aws-3-auction/?p=401610

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Drove by a T-Mobile tower today and noticed a nice long wire hanging off of one of the sector antennas. Either the crew left something undone for the weekend or something got detached! attachicon.gif ImageUploadedByTapatalk1423974591.002875.jpg

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Where?
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That looks like a plain old AIR PCS+AWS antenna. No 700. Most T-Mobile sites around here have had them for a year or so.

 

Not sure how the cable ended up that way. Someone had to really, really screw up the cable mounts for that to happen by accident.

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That looks like a plain old AIR PCS+AWS antenna. No 700. Most T-Mobile sites around here have had them for a year or so.

 

Not sure how the cable ended up that way. Someone had to really, really screw up the cable mounts for that to happen by accident.

I'll add that a T-Mobile reddit user found a petition by AT&T to use 700 MHz A in Rockford. The 700 A license for Chicago could well end up in the hands of AT&T.

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