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(#1)
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Senior Member
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Join Date: 07 Jul 2006
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![]() I have a UK Nokia 6500 slide which has
GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900 UMTS 850 / 2100 I will be visiting NY, Washington, Virginia, Maryland. I want to tether a laptop: I'm only interested in data. I am considering getting an AT&T SIM. I read that they use UMTS 850/1900 and I read that their coverage is better than T-mobile. Is UMTS 850 available everywhere that there is AT&T 3G coverage? If not will I be OK with just UMTS 850 and not UMTS 1900? Any recommendation for an AT&T SIM? Perhaps the one mentioned here if it's still available. TIA Dave |
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(#2)
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Join Date: 15 Nov 2006
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![]() Since 850MHz reaches farther and so requires less base stations, which renders network rollout cheaper, I expect that AT&T's 3G coverage is primarily based on 850MHz, while the 1900MHz-band serves only to extend capacity in urban areas with high load. Unfortunately AT&T's coverage map doesn't disclose frequencies and you'll hardly find user reports on the web, as your phone's frequency configuration is very exotic. Usually UMTS850-capable phones do support UMTS1900, too. Actually I don't know of any other phone supporting only UMTS850.
postpaid: O2 on Business XL; prepaid: DE: Aldi Talk, Lidl; UK: 3; BG: MTel, vivacom; RU: MTS; RS: MTS; UAE: du Tourist SIM; INT'L: toggle mobile VoIP: sipgate.de (German DID); sipgate.co.uk (British DID); ukddi.com (British DID); sipcall.ch (Swiss DID); megafon.bg (Bulgarian DID); InterVoip.com |
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(#3)
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Posts: 389
Join Date: 10 Dec 2006
Location: Regina, SK, CA
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![]() AT&T has EDGE everywhere they have 2G coverage - something that might be useful.
Also note that AT&T prepaid service does not permit roaming on other providers, so when you look at the AT&T coverage map, be sure to look at the prepaid map and not the postpaid one. There are huge areas of the US (particularly the central and western US) where there is little to no AT&T native service. Then again, while T-Mobile prepaid permits roaming, it doesn't yet permit true data access, just limited WAP - and their 3G is at 1700 MHz anyway. Hardware: Too much but notably iPhone 5, iPad Mini Retina LTE, Moto G LTE (N.A. version), iPhone 4. All unlocked. |
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(#4)
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Senior Member
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Posts: 1,399
Join Date: 15 Nov 2006
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![]() It seems like my assumptions above are wrong. Wikipedia says:
Quote:
postpaid: O2 on Business XL; prepaid: DE: Aldi Talk, Lidl; UK: 3; BG: MTel, vivacom; RU: MTS; RS: MTS; UAE: du Tourist SIM; INT'L: toggle mobile VoIP: sipgate.de (German DID); sipgate.co.uk (British DID); ukddi.com (British DID); sipcall.ch (Swiss DID); megafon.bg (Bulgarian DID); InterVoip.com |
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(#5)
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![]() Quote:
I found this site WirelessAdvisor which tells you (IIUC) who licenses the spectrum where. Plugging in a random place in Virgina: Shanadoah tells me that AT&T use UMTS 850. Or does it? I assume that all US phones have 850 and 1900 - it seems odd that this one only has 850 if that's an unusual frequency. Maybe I'll try emailing AT&T. @Photojim: thanks for the comment about prepaid - I would not have guessed that it matters. AT&T prepaid (aka Gophone?) reception seems OK in the area I mentioned in my OP. The phone does have EDGE. |
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(#6)
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Senior Member
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Posts: 389
Join Date: 10 Dec 2006
Location: Regina, SK, CA
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![]() North American-market 3G phones seem to always support both UMTS 850 and 1900. I guess it's the same issue we saw with tri-band 2G phones... they tended to support 900/1800/1900 or 850/1800/1900. With some providers that would be okay, with others it would be far from optimal.
Really, though, you have no choice here. Either you get a new phone, or you live with what AT&T gives you. ![]() We have similar issues here in Canada. I am not certain exactly what frequencies are universally used (if any) for 3G - in dense urban areas it's certainly both 850 and 1900 as all the major carriers have spectrum in both frequency ranges - but we have the identical issue with 2G EDGE here. In the city where I live, it's at both 850 and 1900 MHz so my European tri-band 900/1800/1900 EDGE-supporting phone works perfectly, but at my cottage, EDGE is at 850 MHz and 1900 MHz is GPRS only. I get voice service, but very slow data service. You can pick up a phone like a Nokia E63 pretty cheaply unlocked (that's my unlocked 3G phone until my ordered-this-morning iPhone 4 comes). That will give you the good 3G service here (granted, that particular phone is UMTS, not HSPA) and has quad-band 2G so you can use it in a pinch at home. Hardware: Too much but notably iPhone 5, iPad Mini Retina LTE, Moto G LTE (N.A. version), iPhone 4. All unlocked. |
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(#7)
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Posts: 187
Join Date: 14 Sep 2008
Location: North America
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![]() From what I understand, when 3G was 1st rolled out in the US, it was at 1900 MHz only, with 850 added later on (especially after the analogue shutdowns of 200
![]() 2007-05-14: T-Mobile post-paid (USA: 267) 2007-12: T-Mobile pre-paid (USA: 857) 2009-01-21: Mobal World (UK) 2010-06-08: TracFone (USA: 215) 2011-03-12: Tru (USA: 305) 2011-08-01: AT&T pre-paid (USA: 212) 2011-08-22: Spot Mobile (USA: 603) |
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