Jump to content

T-Mobile LTE & Network Discussion


CriticalityEvent

Recommended Posts

Huh? Why would putting people on NON-lte phones keep score up?

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Less congestion on the network by the masses. So when tech sites/blogs do their "tests," the network would potentially produce significantly higher data throughput than if everybody's mammas mamma was on the LTE network. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Less congestion on the network by the masses. So when tech sites do their "tests," the network they would potentially produce significantly higher data throughput than if everybody's mammas mamma was on the LTE network.

Less people on Hspa means they'd refarm AWS Hspa to lte.

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Less people on Hspa means they'd refarm AWS Hspa to lte.

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Yes, in the long term.  It was mostly sarcasm, hence the  :lol: .  Don't take it too personally/seriously. :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I would reckon reuse factor of 7, which leaves an extra channel for a random 4 sector site?

 

Would be my best guess.

3/4/6 sector sites are common in Latin America, Europe, and Asia, which is where the higher minimum carriers are needed. I believe here in the U.S., most are 3 sector only, so you'd just chop off one GSM carrier (21 instead of 22).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3/4/6 sector sites are common in Latin America, Europe, and Asia, which is where the higher minimum carriers are needed. I believe here in the U.S., most are 3 sector only, so you'd just chop off one GSM carrier (21 instead of 22).

Since more sectors increases capacity, why don't we have more sectors here?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3/4/6 sector sites are common in Latin America, Europe, and Asia, which is where the higher minimum carriers are needed. I believe here in the U.S., most are 3 sector only, so you'd just chop off one GSM carrier (21 instead of 22).

Tmobile nsn uses 4 sectors iirc.

 

Sent from my Nexus 5

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Tmobile nsn uses 4 sectors iirc.

 

Sent from my Nexus 5

Well that's a pretty broad stroke of the paintbrush.

 

Yes, T-Mobile has many, many 4 sector sites in its macro infrastructure, typically to provide certain capacity and coverage requirements where they can't feasibly use 2 macro sites but need that extra coverage and capacity.

 

This 4-sector deal has also caused all the false Band 12 reports from LTE discovery due to the seemingly mindless GCI scheme T-Mobile has decided to employ for the Band 12 overlay.

 

I also feel pretty confident that 4-sector Ericsson builds exist too. But not every site is 4-sector. Heck, not every site is even 3-sector in some rural builds.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Price Guarantee: Pricing available while you remain a customer.  Unlimited high-speed data option pricing guaranteed for 2 years of activation. Excludes taxes, fees, & other (e.g., pay-per use) charges

 

https://b2b.t-mobile.com/landing/business-plans.html

 

I know it's the business site but Legere said basically the same thing at uncarrier 9.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

How about inside? TMO always has good outside coverage.

 

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.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

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.

What is Emergency Calls only?  Is that a network status specific to TMobile?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

What is Emergency Calls only?  Is that a network status specific to TMobile?

It means you can't make phone calls except for 911 because tmo doesn't allow in market roaming on att if you have no signal; sprint allows roaming on vzw even if it's in market.

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

It means you can't make phone calls except for 911 because tmo doesn't allow in market roaming on att if you have no signal; sprint allows roaming on vzw even if it's in market.

That's a significant knock against T-Mobile imo.

 

Sent from my SM-N910T

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

What is Emergency Calls only? Is that a network status specific to TMobile?

Its not specific to T-Mobile. I get that on my nexus when I pull the Sim, or any old deactivated phone.

 

Sent from my VS980 4G using Tapatalk

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It's been interesting using T-Mo the last few days, seems like B4 is blanketed here, have yet to run across a dead zone.

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.

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.

Experienced any gmo lte 1900 sites?

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

    • Excuse my rookie comments here, but after enabling *#73#, it seems that the rainbow sim V2? requires n70 (I turned it off along with n71 - was hoping to track n66) to be available else it switches to T-Mobile.  So this confirms my suspicion that you need to be close to a site to get on Dish.  Have no idea why they don't just use plmn. To test, I put it into a s21 ultra, rebooted twice, came up on T-Mobile (no n70 on s21).  Tried to manually register on 313340, but it did not connect (tried twice). I am on factory unlocked firmware but used a s22 hack to get *#73# working.  Tried what you were suggesting with a T-Mobile sim partially installed, but that was very unstable with Dish ( I think they had figured that one out).  [edit: and now I see Boost sent me a successful device swap notice which says I can now begin to use my new device.  Sigh.  Will try again later and wait for this message - too impatient.]
    • Hopefully this indicates T-Mobile hasn't completely abandoned mmwave and/or small cells? But then again this is the loop, so take that as you will. Hopefully now that most macro activity is done (besides rural colo/builds), they will start working on small cells.   
    • This has been approved.. https://www.cnet.com/tech/mobile/fcc-approves-t-mobiles-deal-to-purchase-mint-mobile/  
    • In the conference call they had two question on additional spectrum. One was the 800 spectrum. They are not certain what will happen, thus have not really put it into their plans either way (sale or no sale). They do have a reserve level. Nationwide 800Mhz is seen as great for new technologies which I presume is IOT or 5g slices.  T-Mobile did not bite on use of their c-band or DOD.  mmWave rapidly approaching deadlines not mentioned at all. FWA brushes on this as it deals with underutilized spectrum on a sector by sector basis.  They are willing to take more money to allow FWA to be mobile (think RV or camping). Unsure if this represents a higher priority, for example, FWA Mobile in RVs in Walmart parking lots working where mobile phones need all the capacity. In terms of FWA capacity, their offload strategy is fiber through joint ventures where T-Mobile does the marketing, sales, and customer support while the fiber company does the network planning and installation.  50%-50% financial split not being consolidated into their books. I think discussion of other spectrum would have diluted the fiber joint venture discussion. They do have a fund which one use is to purchase new spectrum. Sale of the 800Mhz would go into this. It should be noted that they continue to buy 2.5Ghz spectrum from schools etc to replace leases. They will have a conference this fall  to update their overall strategies. Other notes from the call are 75% of the phones on the network are 5g. About 85% of their sites have n41, n25, and n71, 90% 5g.  93% of traffic is on midband.  SA is also adding to their performance advantage, which they figure is still ahead of other carriers by two years. It took two weeks to put the auction 108 spectrum to use at their existing sites. Mention was also made that their site spacing was designed for midrange thus no gaps in n41 coverage, while competitors was designed for lowband thus toggles back and forth for n77 also with its shorter range.  
    • The manual network selection sounds like it isn't always scanning NR, hence Dish not showing up. Your easiest way to force Dish is going to be forcing the phone into NR-only mode (*#*#4636#*#* menu?), since rainbow sims don't support SA on T-Mobile.
  • Recently Browsing

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