Jump to content

Network, Network Vision/LTE Deployment

Place your Legacy Network and Network Vision/LTE Deployment related threads here.


Subforums

  1. Markets

    Threads about Network Vision/LTE deployments specific to markets should be placed in this folder.

    128k
    posts
  2. Equipment Spotting

    The Equipment Spotting threads show pictures and information to help you spot network equipment in the wild, varied by OEM Vendor.

    986
    posts

1,153 topics in this forum

  1. Sprint Super Bowl Coverage/DAS 1 2 3 4 15

    • 370 replies
    • 33.9k views
    • 53 replies
    • 7.5k views
  2. NR_Advanced!

    • 0 replies
    • 514 views
    • 26 replies
    • 5k views
    • 3 replies
    • 1.7k views
    • 430 replies
    • 35.8k views
  3. 3G Shutdown 1 2

    • 37 replies
    • 8.2k views
    • 1.2k replies
    • 220.8k views
    • 18 replies
    • 3.9k views
    • 86 replies
    • 20k views
  4. lagg issue

    • 0 replies
    • 540 views
  5. How to decode cell site IDs?

    • 2 replies
    • 2k views
  6. Sprint 5G GoLive

    • 10 replies
    • 2.8k views
  7. 50GB hotspot info

    • 5 replies
    • 1.1k views
  8. Mobilitie Sites

    • 22 replies
    • 4.8k views
  9. Google Fi will Use Sprint's Network for 5G

    • 1 reply
    • 1.3k views
    • 7 replies
    • 1.9k views
  10. MIMO in the Orlando Market

    • 1 reply
    • 943 views
  11. Wrong PRL

    • 0 replies
    • 1.2k views
    • 0 replies
    • 1.1k views
  12. 11/9 Coverage Map Update

    • 9 replies
    • 1.4k views
    • 13 replies
    • 1.9k views
    • 6 replies
    • 1.8k views
    • 184 replies
    • 24.6k views
    • 5 replies
    • 3.1k views
  • gallery_1_23_9202.png

  • New Topics

  • Trending Topics

  • Recent Posts

    • I've now seen how things work in Kobe, Hiroshima, and Osaka, as well as some areas south of Osaka (e.g. Wakayama, Kinokawa), and tried three more SIMs. The two physical SIMs (different branding for each) both use IIJ, which provides a Japanese IP address/routing on NTT, aleit LTE-only, so latency is ~45ms to Tokyo. The catch with NTT is that it uses two frequency bands (B42/3500 MHz LTE, n79/4900 MHz NR) that you're not going to get on an Android sold in the US, and I'm guessing that B42 would be helpful speed-wise on that network, as it doesn't have B41. I also found one place that doesn't have cell service: a vending machine in the back of the Osaka Castle tower. Or, rather, the B8/18/19 signal is weak enough there to be unusable. Going back to 5G for a moment, I saw a fair amount of Softbank n257 in Hiroshima, as well as in some train stations between Osaka and Kobe. 4x100 MHz bandwidth, anchored by B1/3/8, with speeds sometimes exceeding 400 Mbps on the US Mobile roaming eSIM. Not quite the speeds I've seen on mmW in the States, but I've probably been on mmW for more time over the past few days than I have in the US over the past year, so I'll take it. My fastest speed test was actually on SoftBank n77 though, with 100 MHz of that plus 10x10 B8 hitting ~700 Mbps down and ~80 Mbps up with ~100ms latency...on the roaming eSIM...on the 4th floor of the hotel near Shin-Kobe station. Guessing B8 was a DAS or small cell based on signal levels, and the n77 might have been (or was just a less-used sector of the site serving the train station). I'm now 99% sure that all three providers are running DSS on band 28, and I've seen 10x10 on similar frequencies from both NTT and SoftBank IIRC, on both LTE and 5G. I also picked up one more eSIM: my1010, which is different from 1010/csl used by US Mobile's eSIM unfortunately, as it's LTE-only. On the bright side, it's cheap (10GB/7 days is like $11, and 20GB for the same period would be around $15), and can use both KDDI and SoftBank LTE. It also egresses from Taiwan (Chunghwa Telecom), though latency isn't really any better than the Singapore based eSIMs. Tomorrow will include the most rural part of our journey, so we'll see how networks hold up there, and from tomorrow night on we'll be in Tokyo, so any further reports after that will be Tokyo-centric.
    • I think the push for them is adding US Mobile as a MVNO with a priority data plan.  Ultimately, making people more aware of priority would allow them (and other carriers) to differentiate themselves from MVNOs like Consumer Cellular that advertise the same coverage. n77 has dramatically reduced the need for priority service at Verizon where the mere functioning of your phone was in jeopardy a couple of years ago if you had a low priority plan like Red Pocket. Only have heard of problems with T-Mobile in parts of Los Angeles. AT&T fell in between. All had issues at large concerts and festivals, or sporting events if your carrier has no on-site rights. Edit: Dishes native 5g network has different issues: not enough sites, limited bandwidth. Higher priority would help a few. Truth is they can push phones to AT&T or T-Mobile.
  • Recently Browsing

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