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-   -   Virgin Mobile UK Now Roams in the US (https://prepaid.mondo3.com/forum/showthread.php?t=2823)

Stu 21-10-2007 04:41

Virgin Mobile UK Now Roams in the US
 
I'm in the US. I stuck a Virgin SIM in a phone because I deliberately did not want the phone to register on a network for reasons irrelevant to this post. To my amazement, it registered and showed that data services were available.

Stu

Motel75 21-10-2007 10:04

Hmmm. I hadn't thought about this, but I tried out Virgin prepaid cards this past June in the US, and they worked as well. (I'm a direct debit customer, so it has always officially worked for me.) In fact, I'm pretty sure my dad used his prepaid VM SIM to call home from Philadelphia in early 2005, as he left his Verizon paperweight-outside-the-US phone at home. I didn't realize VM were still saying that prepaid SIMs didn't work Stateside.

MATHA531 21-10-2007 11:34

It's worked in the USA (Virgin Mobile UK that is prepaid) for at least 3 or 4 years! And data worked too...as a matter of fact to keep the card valid (I believe they require one paid event every 6 months; although it may have increased to a year) I simply downloaded a ring tone from somewhere which cost a grand total of 9p.

Stu 21-10-2007 13:07

I bought this SIM in 1999 and didn't have the activity restriction. This is my wife's SIM and it is used loosely once a year. Last year, it was used three times, but other times it might be 18 mos. Last time I tried it in the US, it didn't work, but I am not sure of the timing.

Motel75 21-10-2007 13:28

Yep, this is why I was fiddling with VM phones in the US, to send an SMS just to make sure they didn't expire. According to the website, it's 180 days, but experience suggests it's at least 365 (Customer Service told me it was exactly 365 days).

The exorbitant call costs when roaming in the US are reason enough to not use it there, but this is true for most foreign operators, not just VM. (Note to mobile phone operators: In a market economy, the higher the price, the less likely people will be to use a service, particularly when it is a notional cost.)

Stu 21-10-2007 13:56

I never use a roaming SIM in the US. Even most Canadian SIMs burn you for US usage. I wanted a SIM that would permit the phone to boot up,

MATHA531 21-10-2007 14:34

...as noted the value of roaming in the US is absolutely not to make calls but to be able to keep it alive cheaply....for example UM required one paid activity every 9 months although according to most, it's loosely enforced....calls are very expensive but sending an sms is much cheaper and serves the purpose...as noted where internet is available, a quick download of a ring tone from a free service will also do the trick....with Virgin Mobile as noted it was 9p and voila problem solved....

Mobile World (before the advent of the other cheap services such as Orange Call Abroad) from Carphone Warehouse was a good deal but without roaming ability, the card expired after 60 days originally (I think that has been increased to 90 days) although as I understand it I think, you could call customer service to restore service to the sim card perhaps with a different number and get your credit back.

Then there is what the French providers pull and this is one place perhaps the eu could do some good...if you buy a €15 recharge, for example, one month and then they steal your credit and six months later the sim card expires...no amount of making calls or sending sms keeps it alive and since the only way foreigners can recharge is with recharge slips from the carrier (although SFR can recharge with vodafone slips provided you are in a vodafone country) it is hard to keep the card alive if you desire retaining the number and sim card.

Of course, it must be added, that for Americans travelling to the UK, Virgin Mobile is far from the bargain it used to be. Their price to call North America from the UK was 20p/minute which once upon a time was a good price compared say to Vodafone (which still charges, I believe, £1/minute to call North America) with their local UK rate of 15p/minute for first five minutes of use each day and then dropping to 5p per minute...ever since they instituted the 10p minimum per call that rate is no longer the bargain it once was.....and of course there are now far cheaper alternatives to calling North America from the UK (Mobile World, Orange Call Abroad, and the T Mobile service with YourCall). But for some strange reason, I do try to keep the sim card alive.

andy 21-10-2007 15:50

I think the SIM lasts quite a long time even if totally unused; I've never heard of someone disconnected in under a year, and 18 months or more seems to be quite often survivable. The data at 0.5p/kB even when roaming is useful from time to time, especially with their occasional free SIMs including £5 credit.

One possibility is to send an sms equivalent with a Vyke account - and you can change the Vyke PIN to represent another account for one of your other numbers as source of the message if you wish

- provided that that number also has data capability and has been used first, otherwise it seems a default resets the sending SIM phone number on to the account instead, an issue I'm still trying to work around - in other words, I could use a Virgin or O2 SIM to send a message from my O2 or Sunsim number, but haven't yet succeeded with the UM+ Jersey one ...

Bossman 21-10-2007 16:11

Virgin has roamed here for a long time. Bought mine brand new on ebay over 4 years ago. It came with 5 pounds credit. It roamed and was data ready out of the box. It will usually roam on tmobile here. My primary use for mine is for data when roaming...As already mentioned, they charge the same for data roaming or not. It has worked in every country I have used it in. Even in countries that's not listed on the payg page on their website. For example, I have taken mine on several cruises that have taken me through at least 12 Caribbean Islands/countries and it has worked every where. Heck! Even on the ships themselves. I have also used it in Nigeria.

Stu 21-10-2007 16:42

My Virgin is not on direct debit. I could pass Orange's credit check, but not Virgin's.

I have a UK phone number hooked to my Asterisks box with numerous "virtual extensions." Calls to the number plus a five digit extension connect me to my top fifty numbers.

I also use this approach to extend "my fav" plans on an American and a Canadian carrier that I use. It is also my UAE favorite international number on Etisislut. With this approach, I also have free incoming throughout the US and unlimited 1.2 cents a minute inbound in Canada.


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