Jump to content

Shentel / Sprint LTE - (was ntelos - West & N&W Virginia)


marioc21

Recommended Posts

Actually thats all my note 5 wants to hang on. I get -110 41 at work but -80/-85 at work on band 26 which is pulling 20mbps to 9mbps on band 41. Not complaining at either one, i will check out note 5 thread to see if a way to set band priority. Just got the phone 3 weeks ago.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Actually, I've not seen it on SCP since nTelos went live, at least not in C'ville.

 

Sent from my HTC One M9 on Tapatalk

You have seen 3 sites inside C'ville with band 41 the same day you sent your last log(dec 2). If it starts with 01A or 01B the site is B41. mikejeep may not having it show B41 all the time. If you see 01A or 01B and don't see B41 post a screenshot and I will send mike a message. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Interesting that at work in Charlottesville I can't gat data on LTE. Up near Kroger in Rio Hill. No problems with data in the Stony Point area.

 

Miss signal check. What would be similar for the iPhone?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

You have seen 3 sites inside C'ville with band 41 the same day you sent your last log(dec 2). If it starts with 01A or 01B the site is B41. mikejeep may not having it show B41 all the time. If you see 01A or 01B and don't see B41 post a screenshot and I will send mike a message.

This screenshot doesn't exactly pertain, but I was curious how to know the GCI when this happens:

 

ae07bc4002a77e09a6cb589153d7d356.jpg

 

Sent from my HTC One M9 on Tapatalk

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Still waiting for Huntington. Shentel is working on it, but I thought for sure they should have been able to fix the issue by now...

I was told that they were having an issue with one of the frequencies.

 

Sent from my N9518 using Tapatalk

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Actually thats all my note 5 wants to hang on. I get -110 41 at work but -80/-85 at work on band 26 which is pulling 20mbps to 9mbps on band 41. Not complaining at either one, i will check out note 5 thread to see if a way to set band priority. Just got the phone 3 weeks ago.

you need your msl code to edit the priority, default is 25 26 41

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

You have seen 3 sites inside C'ville with band 41 the same day you sent your last log(dec 2). If it starts with 01A or 01B the site is B41. mikejeep may not having it show B41 all the time. If you see 01A or 01B and don't see B41 post a screenshot and I will send mike a message.

So, I did notice one today!

 

c995ff873a8c58f86d77d65bd41ed8e1.jpg

 

Notice that SCP didn't show the 2600 frequency.

 

and checked my speed on that site (Sorry, AJ!)

 

e1540c1d9c059cc432a67b4e84d81d3b.jpg

 

 

 

Sent from my HTC One M9 on Tapatalk

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

So, I did notice one today!

 

 

 

Notice that SCP didn't show the 2600 frequency.

 

and checked my speed on that site (Sorry, AJ!)

 

e1540c1d9c059cc432a67b4e84d81d3b.jpg

 

 

 

Sent from my HTC One M9 on Tapatalk

 

 

Something is wrong with this picture.... An upload speed of 44Mbps is impossible on any of the LTE bands currently deployed in the nTelos market.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Something is wrong with this picture.... An upload speed of 44Mbps is impossible on any of the LTE bands currently deployed in the nTelos market.

 

Agree.  Something very odd going on there.  Misconfigured site?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

So, I did notice one today!

 

c995ff873a8c58f86d77d65bd41ed8e1.jpg

 

Notice that SCP didn't show the 2600 frequency.

 

and checked my speed on that site (Sorry, AJ!)

 

e1540c1d9c059cc432a67b4e84d81d3b.jpg

 

 

 

Sent from my HTC One M9 on Tapatalk

 

Were were you when you did this test? It seems way off. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It's a big variance though. I am guessing misconfigured site.

 

No, I highly doubt it. It's simply not possible to get that kind of upload given the LTE bands deployed. You would have to devote ALL of the spectrum to solely upload to do it. Even at 10x10, the max upload is roughly 37Mbps, and that is hard to come by. So it's not possible for a site to provide those kinds of speeds, even misconfigured. Additionally, TDD-LTE is very sensitive, if even one site in earshot of any other is misbehaving, it affects the whole network. 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

No, I highly doubt it. It's simply not possible to get that kind of upload given the LTE bands deployed. You would have to devote ALL of the spectrum to solely upload to do it. Even at 10x10, the max upload is roughly 37Mbps, and that is hard to come by. So it's not possible for a site to provide those kinds of speeds, even misconfigured. Additionally, TDD-LTE is very sensitive, if even one site in earshot of any other is misbehaving, it affects the whole network.

 

Thanks for the education. :) So what do you guess is going on then?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks for the education. :) So what do you guess is going on then?

 

As I said earlier, it was likely a Speedtest server issue. Same reason we saw speedtests coming out of Miami showing well over 100Mbps download before CA was deployed, even before Spark was widely deployed. 

  • Like 1
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

    • Starlink (1900mhz) for T-Mobile, AST SpaceMobile (700mhz and 850mhz) for AT&T, GlobalStar (unknown frequency) for Apple, Iridium (unknown frequency) for Samsung, and AST SpaceMobile (850mhz) for Verizon only work on frequency bands the carrier has licensed nationwide.  These systems broadcast and listen on multiple frequencies at the same time in areas much wider than normal cellular market license areas.  They would struggle with only broadcasting certain frequencies only in certain markets so instead they require a nationwide license.  With the antennas that are included on the satellites, they have range of cellular band frequencies they support and can have different frequencies with different providers in each supported country.  The cellular bands in use are typically 5mhz x 5mhz bands (37.5mbps total for the entire cell) or smaller so they do not have a lot of data bandwidth for the satellite band covering a very large plot of land with potentially millions of customers in a single large cellular satellite cell.  I have heard that each of Starlink's cells sharing that bandwidth will cover 75 or more miles. Satellite cellular connectivity will be set to the lowest priority connection just before SOS service on supported mobile devices and is made available nationwide in supported countries.  The mobile device rules pushed by the provider decide when and where the device is allowed to connect to the satellite service and what services can be provided over that connection.  The satellite has a weak receiving antenna and is moving very quickly so any significant obstructions above your mobile device antenna could cause it not to work.  All the cellular satellite services are starting with texting only and some of them like Apple's solution only support a predefined set of text messages.  Eventually it is expected that a limited number of simultaneous voice calls (VoLTE) will run on these per satellite cell.  Any spare data will then be available as an extremely slow LTE data connection as it could potentially be shared by millions of people.  Satellite data from the way these are currently configured will likely never work well enough to use unless you are in a very remote location.
    • T-Mobile owns the PCS G-block across the contiguous U.S. so they can just use that spectrum to broadcast direct to cell. Ideally your phone would only connect to it in areas where there isn't any terrestrial service available.
    • So how does this whole direct to satellite thing fit in with the way it works now? Carriers spend billions for licenses for specific areas. So now T-Mobile can offer service direct to customers without having a Terrestrial license first?
    • I wouldn’t be shocked if it’s Verizon, too. In my area they have multiple nodes on the same block as full macro sites with mmWave, in direct line of sight. 
  • Recently Browsing

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