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- 05-01-2007, 10:50 AM #1PheenieGuest
I have a Sprint free and clear plan that permits roaming without any
additional charges. What I have noticed in certain non-Sprint areas is
that my current Sanyo 8300 phone will work well if I am on "digital
roam" but is usually unusable on "analog roam". So to use it in these
areas I have to sit and wait for the phone to swith to "digital
roaming" and then make my call quickly before it goes back to analog
roaming. I am then able to complete my call and never seem to get
dropped once connected. NOW.....my question is this- Would a dual-mode
phone that only allows digital roaming solve my problem? My current
phone will not allow me to switch off "analog". Any other suggestions
other than to switch carriers?
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› See More: Reception question
- 05-01-2007, 01:58 PM #2Todd AllcockGuest
Re: Reception question
At 01 May 2007 12:50:46 -0400 Pheenie wrote:
> I have a Sprint free and clear plan that permits roaming without any
> additional charges. What I have noticed in certain non-Sprint areas is
> that my current Sanyo 8300 phone will work well if I am on "digital
> roam" but is usually unusable on "analog roam". So to use it in these
> areas I have to sit and wait for the phone to swith to "digital
> roaming" and then make my call quickly before it goes back to analog
> roaming. I am then able to complete my call and never seem to get
> dropped once connected. NOW.....my question is this- Would a dual-mode
> phone that only allows digital roaming solve my problem?
Sure- the same way cutting off your head "solves" a headache.
It doesn't fix the root of the problem- why can't the phone make a call
in analog mode?
> My current
> phone will not allow me to switch off "analog". Any other suggestions
> other than to switch carriers?
Call Sprint and make sure your phone and account is setup properly? You
should be able to make a call in analog. Sprint has no analog coverage
of it's own- analog roaming is the only reason your phone supports analog
in the first place! Perhaps your phone has the wrong PRL (one meant for
a digital-only phone, maybe?)
--
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- 05-01-2007, 02:26 PM #3Dennis FergusonGuest
Re: Reception question
On 2007-05-01, Pheenie <[email protected]> wrote:
> I have a Sprint free and clear plan that permits roaming without any
> additional charges. What I have noticed in certain non-Sprint areas is
> that my current Sanyo 8300 phone will work well if I am on "digital
> roam" but is usually unusable on "analog roam". So to use it in these
> areas I have to sit and wait for the phone to swith to "digital
> roaming" and then make my call quickly before it goes back to analog
> roaming. I am then able to complete my call and never seem to get
> dropped once connected. NOW.....my question is this- Would a dual-mode
> phone that only allows digital roaming solve my problem? My current
> phone will not allow me to switch off "analog". Any other suggestions
> other than to switch carriers?
This happens to me all the time when I travel in weak signal areas
(particularly Mexico). When there is digital and analog service on
the same tower my phone will often drop a weak but working digital
signal in favor of an analog service which looks a bit stronger to
the phone but doesn't actually work when you try to make a call.
A digital-only phone will fix this, but at the expense of losing service
other places where there is analog, but no appropriate digital, service.
Such places still exist as well. For a better solution, my LG phone
(from Verizon) has a test menu which allows you to force the phone
to digital-only, when that works better, while allowing you to go
back to automatic when analog is all you have. If you can find a
phone from Sprint with the same function this would be perfect.
Dennis Ferguson
- 05-02-2007, 11:22 AM #4Jerome ZelinskeGuest
Re: Reception question
It is very likely that every where you go you will have digital
service available to you. Only you know if that is so or not. If it
is, then getting a digital only phone will be just fine for you. It
also makes the phone less complicated. It works smoother. Uses less
battery. Misses fewer calls. Etc.
Pheenie wrote:
> I have a Sprint free and clear plan that permits roaming without any
> additional charges. What I have noticed in certain non-Sprint areas is
> that my current Sanyo 8300 phone will work well if I am on "digital
> roam" but is usually unusable on "analog roam". So to use it in these
> areas I have to sit and wait for the phone to swith to "digital
> roaming" and then make my call quickly before it goes back to analog
> roaming. I am then able to complete my call and never seem to get
> dropped once connected. NOW.....my question is this- Would a dual-mode
> phone that only allows digital roaming solve my problem? My current
> phone will not allow me to switch off "analog". Any other suggestions
> other than to switch carriers?
>
- 05-03-2007, 11:16 AM #5jeremyGuest
Re: Reception question
"Pheenie" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I have a Sprint free and clear plan that permits roaming without any
> additional charges. What I have noticed in certain non-Sprint areas is
> that my current Sanyo 8300 phone will work well if I am on "digital
> roam" but is usually unusable on "analog roam". So to use it in these
> areas I have to sit and wait for the phone to swith to "digital
> roaming" and then make my call quickly before it goes back to analog
> roaming. I am then able to complete my call and never seem to get
> dropped once connected. NOW.....my question is this- Would a dual-mode
> phone that only allows digital roaming solve my problem? My current
> phone will not allow me to switch off "analog". Any other suggestions
> other than to switch carriers?
>
> --
> Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com
>
One possible factor is that analog signals may be much stronger from the
tower than they are from your handset. In other words, your handset "sees"
an analog signal, but is too weak to transmit a usable signal back to the
tower. (My handset operates at a maximum of 200 milliwatts, while bag
phones (AMPS) push out several watts of power.)
Just a thought.
- 05-03-2007, 03:17 PM #6PheenieGuest
Re: Reception question
Thanks for all of the answers. I think I will haved to try a dual-mode
phone from Sprint and see for myself if this will work out for me.
>
--
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