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(#1)
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Junior Member
Newbie
Posts: 6
Join Date: 05 Jul 2007
Country:
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![]() Hi.
I'm going to South America for an holiday, and I would like to buy a good GSM international card, 'cos italian roaming costs are simply crazy ( 6€ / min.!!!) I will visit Perů, Ecuador and Colombia, and it seems that the only prepaid card I should be able to use is 09, because other cards haven't full coverage of the three countries. Do you think I will be able to manage it? 09 operator will work well on those countries? Any suggested other solution? Thanks! P.S. I have a nokia e65 quad band phone, will it works? |
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(#2)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Professionist
Posts: 1,465
Join Date: 27 Feb 2004
Location: Mississippi, USA
Country:
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![]() I don't know which SIM is best but it's important in S. & Central America to have all four bands. Ecuador has only 850 MHz. Costa Rica has only 1800. Others have strange mixes of 850, 900 & 1800. Your quad band phone should work fine.
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(#3)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Expert
Posts: 451
Join Date: 09 May 2005
Location: Berkeley, California and Miami
Country:
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![]() Many of the intl. SIM cards don't cover a whole lot of S.A. countries. Check the sticky that compares rates and coverage for some SIM sellers.
...mike A/o Oct 20, 2013 no need for intl prepaid as T-Mobile U.S. includes voice roaming at 20˘/min (in and out)., unlimited text (in and out), and unlimited data in 140+ countries. My Plan -[6 lines] U.S. T-Mobile unlimited minutes (incoming and outgoing), unlimited text, fast data on each line. that $145/mo. total! . (In U.S. no surcharge for calling a cell.) If a line exceeds 2G of data in a month, pay $10 more for that line. [That only happens a couple times/year. |
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(#4)
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Junior Member
Newbie
Posts: 8
Join Date: 08 Jul 2007
Country:
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![]() I just came back from Colombia and Peru two weeks ago.
The 09 Mobile did not work in either country. It registered (there were up to three networks available) but was for emergency purposes only or did not allow to dial out. People could not reach me either. In Peru I used a German T-Mobile (around $ 3 for outgoing and $ 2 for incoming calls). I would recommend a local Claro SIM card which sells for 30 soles (US$ 10) which gives you free incoming calls. In Colombia I bought a TIGO SIM card for 10,000 pesos (US$ 5.00) which gave me free incoming calls, messaging for about 50 cents to foreign numbers and reasonable rates to other TIGO subscribers. Calling out is very expensive and I cleaned out my account after less than a minute. Vouchers are available everywhere. Ther is a also Movistar. Best to go to their websites to check them out www.tigo.com.co The small print in the TIGO contract explicitly says that their networks cannot be used for call-backs etc and this is why very few foreign SIM cards work in Colombia. The situation in Ecuador is similar. Last year I tried my T-Mobile and it did not work. A Peruvian Claro SIM card was of no use either. Any quad phone should work. Wolf |
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(#5)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Fan
Posts: 154
Join Date: 06 Aug 2004
Country:
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![]() Beware that depending on where you go it might not make much sense to get an international sim. There are some countries which have surcharges which make roaming in these countries very expensive. I.e. Mexico and Peru to name two off the top of my head. Its much better to get a prepaid sim if you are going to be in either of these places.
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(#6)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Pioneer
Posts: 589
Join Date: 01 May 2006
Location: Greece
Country:
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