Jump to content

PRL 25015/56015/51097


Mooeydj

Recommended Posts

Not sure what you mean, but just because there are scans means only a step to getting 800SMR.  Not a lick of 800SMR around my area no matter the SID as I've been scanning for any SID on 800SMR, regardless of being very close to 3G/4G accepted and active sites.

That's exactly right, once a site is accepted for SMR, a phone will connect to it.  My hidden channel comment was in regards to SID 22429 that is currently being used for testing, I didn't phrase that very well, sorry.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I first read that these were included. I was shocked to see Puerto Rico/Virgin Islands in there. Then I reread your post and see you say these are the only 4 NOT in the latest PRL to scan 800. Oops. :lol:

 

22449 and 22450 are no surprise to me. These are PR/VI with no 800 and nTelos land with no 800. However, the first two kind of surprise me. Parts of 22433 get 800 and all of 22429.

 

This PRL makes me think that starting June 30th, all site acceptances are going to start including CDMA 800, whether 3G or LTE is accepted first. And they probably are going to go back and fire up CDMA 800 quickly on existing completed sites too. Come on June 30th!

 

Robert via Nexus 7 using Tapatalk 4 Beta

 

Maybe I should go back and bold it in red for others ;)

 

Yes, the stage is set and the excitement is building!!  I know the recent push in our area to 3G accept previous 4G sites probably has something to do with this but that trend died off.  The 800 CDMA 1x is truly going to be a game changer then so is 800LTE once again.  It is the one of the major things I'm waiting to test out in my area as it will weigh heavily if I get into another contract with Sprint or not.

 

EDIT:  Fixed my previous post to bold the NOT in red and big letters.

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

That's exactly right, once a site is accepted for SMR, a phone will connect to it.  My hidden channel comment was in regards to SID 22429 that is currently being used for testing, I didn't phrase that very well, sorry.

 

Unless you have an iPhone5 it won't.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yes, the stage is set and the excitement is building!!  I know the recent push in our area to 3G accept previous 4G sites probably has something to do with this but that trend died off.  The 800 CDMA 1x is truly going to be a game changer then so is 800LTE once again.  It is the one of the major things I'm waiting to test out in my area as it will weigh heavily if I get into another contract with Sprint or not.

 

 

Digiblur,

I am out traveling around today.  Going south on I-81from Southern Pennsylvania to Maryland and Virginia. (Shentel Territory)

Have 800 CDMA 1X almost everywhere.   It is very active in Shentel territory.  Coverage is fantastic. Levels are very good.

I surely would not leave Sprint because of a coverage problem in this area.  Hopefully your area will soon catch up.  When you see active 800 in your area, you will smile.  Looks very very good here.

 

I have been able to drive by some sites that are not upgraded to NV yet while holding onto the 800 signal and ignoring the old 1900 coming from the old legacy sites.  Had good levels while doing this too. I have not been testing this out very long, but I see lots of good things.

  • Like 4
Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

 

Fort Wayne already has 800SMR in the stock PRL so I wouldn't worry about any PRL updates at all.

 

 

How do you know if you're connected to 800SMR (just for future reference)

 

 

-Luis

SignalCheck app is the easiest way. The dev is a member here.

 

Or check your 1x engineering for 224xx SIDs.

 

Sent from my little Note2

 

 

  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

How do you know if you're connected to 800SMR (just for future reference)

 

 

-Luis

Dialer(Keypad) For Samsung

##debug# passcode is 777468

and then 1x engineering screen(lol samsung has it spelled wrong)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Dialer(Keypad) For Samsung

##debug# passcode is 777468

and then 1x engineering screen(lol samsung has it spelled wrong)

I have the HTC ONE, and I didn't need the passcode lol...

 

 

Now what am I looking for in particular?

 

 

-Luis

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I first read that these were included. I was shocked to see Puerto Rico/Virgin Islands in there. Then I reread your post and see you say these are the only 4 NOT in the latest PRL to scan 800. Oops. :lol:

 

22449 and 22450 are no surprise to me. These are PR/VI with no 800 and nTelos land with no 800. However, the first two kind of surprise me. Parts of 22433 get 800 and all of 22429.

 

This PRL makes me think that starting June 30th, all site acceptances are going to start including CDMA 800, whether 3G or LTE is accepted first. And they probably are going to go back and fire up CDMA 800 quickly on existing completed sites too. Come on June 30th!

 

Robert via Nexus 7 using Tapatalk 4 Beta

 

Yeah, nTelos doesn't care what anyone else is doing regarding 800mhz.  I wonder what will happen in nTelos-land here once Nextel is shut down.  Is that under the exclusivity agreement as well?  I think Sprint can do 4G-related things here, but anything other than that has to be nTelos-run.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have the HTC ONE, and I didn't need the passcode lol...

 

 

Now what am I looking for in particular?

 

 

-Luis

 

I didn't need the passcode on my Samsung either...lol

 

Scroll up a few posts from yours.

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

digiblur, I edited the title of this thread earlier today.  In this new PRL series, are we dealing with 56015 or 55015?

 

AJ

Link to comment
Share on other sites

digiblur, I edited the title of this thread earlier today. In this new PRL series, are we dealing with 56015 or 55015?

 

AJ

 

I have really lost track since they have like 3 or 4 flavors of each device type. It's like 6 or 7 types... Maybe more.

 

Sent from my little Note2

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have really lost track since they have like 3 or 4 flavors of each device type. It's like 6 or 7 types... Maybe more.

 

Sent from my little Note2

 

I believe there are 6 or so different PRL "types" currently used, keeping corporate-specific PRLs out of the listing.

 

Each should have the same naming convention xxx97 etc.

 

3G only

3G/4G WiMax

3G/4G LTE

iPhone 4 (has its own due to differences in PRL design requirements, used to be the same as standard files but changed due to optimization)

Aircards

GSM World capable devices for flavoring as well

 

I may be wrong on some of these, not at work currently to look at the PRL listing. Can't access S4GRU from behind the firewall... ironically it was blocked in the "sports" category. Can access ESPN and NBA though, yay licensing.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have really lost track since they have like 3 or 4 flavors of each device type. It's like 6 or 7 types... Maybe more.

 

Sent from my little Note2

The prl that you made for sponsors is still better IMO ;)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I believe there are 6 or so different PRL "types" currently used, keeping corporate-specific PRLs out of the listing.

 

Each should have the same naming convention xxx97 etc.

 

3G only

3G/4G WiMax

3G/4G LTE

iPhone 4 (has its own due to differences in PRL design requirements, used to be the same as standard files but changed due to optimization)

Aircards

GSM World capable devices for flavoring as well

 

I may be wrong on some of these, not at work currently to look at the PRL listing. Can't access S4GRU from behind the firewall... ironically it was blocked in the "sports" category. Can access ESPN and NBA though, yay licensing.

 

I thought they combined the older CDMA 1X/EV legacy phones and Aircards finally?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This is pretty awesome. Upgraded my sister's PRL on her GS3, and having "legitimate" access to the ESMR stuff is great. She reported massively reduced dropped calls.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I thought they combined the older CDMA 1X/EV legacy phones and Aircards finally?

 

They may have, I'll take a look and see what I can find next time I'm at work. I'm pretty sure I saw a file somewhere that actually spelled out exactly what types of devices used each PRL.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

digi, is there any reason why PRL 51097 would lead to more time spent on 1xrtt than 3g as compared to before?  Perhaps coincidence with some tower upgrades in NYC that is impacting this comparison, but after the PRL updated, I found myself with 1xrtt where before there was 3g.

 

 

Thanks

Link to comment
Share on other sites

digi, is there any reason why PRL 51097 would lead to more time spent on 1xrtt than 3g as compared to before? Perhaps coincidence with some tower upgrades in NYC that is impacting this comparison, but after the PRL updated, I found myself with 1xrtt where before there was 3g.

 

 

Thanks

 

No reason other than upgrades.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

digi, is there any reason why PRL 51097 would lead to more time spent on 1xrtt than 3g as compared to before? Perhaps coincidence with some tower upgrades in NYC that is impacting this comparison, but after the PRL updated, I found myself with 1xrtt where before there was 3g.

 

 

Thanks

 

This is something that I suppose can happen during NV rollout, for two reasons: (1) 3G is saturated and 1x is ironically actually faster for you -- this is one of the main points of NV, and it will be interesting how the sub base responds: I understand it and I still reflexively toggle airplane mode when I see the dreaded circle symbolizing 1x; (2) NV-upgraded 3G is brought online in clusters, and in the interim, you may wind up instead on adjacent 1x as they tweak it.

 

I also have been seeing that damned circle ALOT more often lately. I am reserving judgement until they progress further in my area and this 800SMR switchover wraps. It is certainly true that, when I force back onto 3G, it is dismally unusable, so I suppose the NV optimization algorithms may be functioning as designed...

 

It is noteworthy that, afaict, calls don't drop, SMS goes thru, and the time to initiate a call is much better (a few seconds vice 15+ seconds with frequent failures). Data, however, is sloooowwww.

Edited by Txmtx
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

  • Posts

    • Since this is kind of the general chat thread, I have to share this humorous story (at least it is to me): Since around February/March of this year, my S22U has been an absolute pain to charge. USB-C cables would immediately fall out and it progressively got worse and worse until it often took me a number of minutes to get the angle of the cable juuuussst right to get charging to occur at all (not exaggerating). The connection was so weak that even walking heavily could cause the cable to disconnect. I tried cleaning out the port with a stable, a paperclip, etc. Some dust/lint/dirt came out but the connection didn't improve one bit. Needless to say, this was a MONSTER headache and had me hating this phone. I just didn't have the finances right now for a replacement.  Which brings us to the night before last. I am angry as hell because I had spent five minutes trying to get this phone to charge and failed. I am looking in the port and I notice it doesn't look right. The walls look rough and, using a staple, the back and walls feel REALLY rough and very hard. I get some lint/dust out with the staple and it improves charging in the sense I can get it to charge but it doesn't remove any of the hard stuff. It's late and it's charging, so that's enough for now. I decide it's time to see if that hard stuff is part of the connector or not. More aggressive methods are needed! I work in a biochem lab and we have a lot of different sizes of disposable needles available. So, yesterday morning, while in the lab I grab a few different sizes of needles between 26AWG and 31 AWG. When I got home, I got to work and start probing the connector with the 26 AWG and 31 AWG needle. The stuff feels extremely hard, almost like it was part of the connector, but a bit does break off. Under examination of the bit, it's almost sandy with dust/lint embedded in it. It's not part of the connector but instead some sort of rock-hard crap! That's when I remember that I had done some rock hounding at the end of last year and in January. This involved lots of digging in very sandy/dusty soils; soils which bare more than a passing resemblance to the crap in the connector. We have our answer, this debris is basically compacted/cemented rock dust. Over time, moisture in the area combined with the compression from inserting the USB-C connector had turned it into cement. I start going nuts chiseling away at it with the 26 AWG needle. After about 5-10 minutes of constant chiseling and scraping with the 26AWG and 31AWG needles, I see the first signs of metal at the back of the connector. So it is metal around the outsides! Another 5 minutes of work and I have scraped away pretty much all of the crap in the connector. A few finishing passes with the 31AWG needle, a blast of compressed air, and it is time to see if this helped any. I plug my regular USB-C cable and holy crap it clicks into place; it hasn't done that since February! I pick up the phone and the cable has actually latched! The connector works pretty much like it did over a year ago, it's almost like having a brand new phone!
    • That's odd, they are usually almost lock step with TMO. I forgot to mention this also includes the September Security Update.
    • 417.55 MB September security update just downloaded here for S24+ unlocked   Edit:  after Sept security update install, checked and found a 13MB GP System update as well.  Still showing August 1st there however. 
    • T-Mobile is selling the rest of the 3.45GHz spectrum to Columbia Capital.  
    • Still nothing for my AT&T and Visible phones.
  • Recently Browsing

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