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(#11)
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The great Dictator!
Prepaid Prophet
Posts: 2,487
Join Date: 13 Jan 2004
Location: Trieste/Trst
Country:
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It's more a problem in Trieste, with Slovenian and even Croatian operators. And I think between Belgium and the Netherlands it's even worse (or better for ygeffens) since there are no mountains at all, just flat land, so the signal can go further... Deceased Prepaids: CZ: Oskar, Eurotel; SK: Orange; DE: E-Plus, Aldi, Simyo; GE: Geocell; AM: Armentel; PL: Heyah, Plus; LT: Tele2; LV: Amigo; EE: Elisa; UA: Kyivstar; NZ: Vodafone; INT: UM, UM+, ICQSim. GSM/3G Phones: Nokia Lumia 630 dual sim |
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(#12)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Fan
Posts: 160
Join Date: 12 Jan 2007
Location: Arendonk, Belgium
Country:
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![]() Hi all,
Thanks for the hints. Only one operator (NL KPN) shows up in my networkselection. Outside my house it's possible to get one bar (out of five, on my iPhone); inside the house I can forget it. So far for 30 km or plus for 900mhz ![]() I think I'll stick to my NL-voip number and forward it. Yves Belgium: Proximus Smart+ 15 (+32 496 contract) Voip: Weepee-voip.be Phones: Apple iPhone 32Gb 5S |
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(#13)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Fan
Posts: 187
Join Date: 14 Sep 2008
Location: North America
Country:
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(#14)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Guru
Posts: 1,091
Join Date: 11 Feb 2004
Location: Detroit (formerly Dubai)
Country:
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![]() Or get a Yagi and point it at NL. Look at Wilson Electronics website for some ideas, but you may then want to track a supplier on your side of the Atlantic.
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(#15)
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Member
Advanced Member
Posts: 64
Join Date: 15 Feb 2008
Location: Amsterdam
Country:
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![]() But the last tower won't be exactly at the border and they won't direct the signal in the direction of Belgium. They want to have coverage in the Netherlands, not Belgium. So if the signal stops 1 meter across the border they are okay.
I think the maximum was 35 km normally and 70 when they use 2 time slots. Wouldn't using the Vodafone option with buurlanden be cheaper? It depends on how many calls you get. But forwarding to a cellphone isn't usually that cheap. |
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(#16)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Fan
Posts: 114
Join Date: 05 May 2004
Country:
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The operators want to pick up the phones of incoming travellers in their own nets. According to GSM 2 standard, the roaming customers are only handed over to others nets when there is no signal at all. So once picked up... the operator gets all the roaming fees. |
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(#17)
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Senior Member
Prepaid Pioneer
Posts: 573
Join Date: 15 Jun 2006
Location: Berlin
Country:
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![]() Hah, just like on the German-Polish border. There are extraterritorial towers that allow you to pick up Voda and TMO (or, indeed, for them to pick you up as a roamer) 20 km before the border on the Berlin-Warsaw railway and road. (I think this was done in part so that customs inspectors from Germany could stay on-network while in PL.) But it's a Pyrrhic victory, at least if you are on the train - while the signal from all three Polish networks is good and strong all the way from Warsaw to the border, once you get into Germany, there is no coverage along the railway line, and it resumes consistently only when you are well within Berlin city limits, 90 km later.
Former DE: Vodafone, T-Mobile, O2, Blauworld, 01051mobile, Solomo, Lycamobile, Simyo, Congstar, Fonic, Edeka Mobile, Lidl Mobile; PL: Heyah, Era, Virgin, Sami Swoi, Orange, POP, iPlus, Carrefour Mova, Telepin Mobi, Play, Lycamobile, T-Mobile; UK: Vodafone, T-Mobile, Virgin; US: T-Mobile, AT&T, Lycamobile; CZ: Vodafone, Oskar; ES: Lebara; GR: Vodafone, Wind; UA: Vodafone; IL: Orange; TR: Turkcell |
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