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  1. #1
    Capn
    Guest
    If I switch my family plan to two individual plans, would I have to resign a
    new contract on each phone? Could I choose the $10 a month no contract deal
    on each plan?


    Capt.





    See More: switching plans




  2. #2
    rabbit
    Guest

    Re: switching plans

    man with sprint if you wipe your behin they want you to sign a new contract
    "Capn" <[email protected]> wrote in message
    news:[email protected]...
    > If I switch my family plan to two individual plans, would I have to resign
    > a new contract on each phone? Could I choose the $10 a month no contract
    > deal on each plan?
    >
    >
    > Capt.
    >
    >






  3. #3
    Ski
    Guest

    Re: switching plans

    "rabbit" <[email protected]> wrote in
    news:[email protected]:

    > man with sprint if you wipe your behin they want you to sign a new
    > contract "Capn" <[email protected]> wrote in message
    > news:[email protected]...
    >> If I switch my family plan to two individual plans, would I have to
    >> resign a new contract on each phone? Could I choose the $10 a month
    >> no contract deal on each plan?
    >>
    >>
    >> Capt.
    >>

    I did thAT AND SIGHNED A NEW CONTRACT. hOWEVER WHEN MY pm 325 DIES IF THERE
    ARE NO MORE BLUETOOTH PHONES i WILL SWITCH OUT ANYWAY



  4. #4
    Capn
    Guest

    Re: switching plans

    Where do you think you will switch out to?


    "Ski" <[email protected]> wrote in message
    news:[email protected]...
    > "rabbit" <[email protected]> wrote in
    > news:[email protected]:
    >
    >> man with sprint if you wipe your behin they want you to sign a new
    >> contract "Capn" <[email protected]> wrote in message
    >> news:[email protected]...
    >>> If I switch my family plan to two individual plans, would I have to
    >>> resign a new contract on each phone? Could I choose the $10 a month
    >>> no contract deal on each plan?
    >>>
    >>>
    >>> Capt.
    >>>

    > I did thAT AND SIGHNED A NEW CONTRACT. hOWEVER WHEN MY pm 325 DIES IF
    > THERE
    > ARE NO MORE BLUETOOTH PHONES i WILL SWITCH OUT ANYWAY






  5. #5
    Steve Sobol
    Guest

    Re: switching plans

    rabbit wrote:
    > man with sprint if you wipe your behin they want you to sign a new contract


    They're not *quite* that bad. a little stricter than some other carriers,
    but as long as you don't change calling plans (or if you change within the
    first 90 days after switching to whatever you're on) the contract doesn't
    extend.

    My beef is with the "activating any phone extends the time to get the
    18-month discount" even if you just activate a piece of crap to use while
    you're saving money for the phone to replace the one you broke. (That was my
    situation a couple months ago.)

    Verizon's policy is much more sane. You qualify starting two months before
    end-of-contract no matter how long your current phone's been activated. In
    other words, Verizon rewards customer loyalty (in this case) without putting
    restrictions on the reward.

    --
    JustThe.net - Apple Valley, CA - http://JustThe.net/ - 888.480.4NET (4638)
    Steven J. Sobol, Geek In Charge / [email protected] / PGP: 0xE3AE35ED

    "The wisdom of a fool won't set you free"
    --New Order, "Bizarre Love Triangle"



  6. #6
    Capn
    Guest

    Re: switching plans

    I remember when you use to be able to switch plans at any time and do it
    back and forth without having to resign. It's stupid, why should you have to
    extend or resign a contract when all you are doing is changing plans, they
    still get your money. Good to know about verizon, anyone know how cingular
    or t-mo is with switching plans, I had t-mo at one time and I remember I was
    able to swtich all the time, no extensions or resigning. Thanks for any
    info.

    Capt.


    "Steve Sobol" <[email protected]> wrote in message
    news:[email protected]...
    > rabbit wrote:
    >> man with sprint if you wipe your behin they want you to sign a new
    >> contract

    >
    > They're not *quite* that bad. a little stricter than some other
    > carriers, but as long as you don't change calling plans (or if you change
    > within the first 90 days after switching to whatever you're on) the
    > contract doesn't extend.
    >
    > My beef is with the "activating any phone extends the time to get the
    > 18-month discount" even if you just activate a piece of crap to use while
    > you're saving money for the phone to replace the one you broke. (That was
    > my situation a couple months ago.)
    >
    > Verizon's policy is much more sane. You qualify starting two months before
    > end-of-contract no matter how long your current phone's been activated. In
    > other words, Verizon rewards customer loyalty (in this case) without
    > putting restrictions on the reward.
    >
    > --
    > JustThe.net - Apple Valley, CA - http://JustThe.net/ - 888.480.4NET (4638)
    > Steven J. Sobol, Geek In Charge / [email protected] / PGP: 0xE3AE35ED
    >
    > "The wisdom of a fool won't set you free"
    > --New Order, "Bizarre Love Triangle"






  7. #7
    Steve Sobol
    Guest

    Re: switching plans

    Paul Miner wrote:

    >>>man with sprint if you wipe your behin they want you to sign a new contract

    >>
    >>They're not *quite* that bad. a little stricter than some other carriers,
    >>but as long as you don't change calling plans (or if you change within the
    >>first 90 days after switching to whatever you're on) the contract doesn't
    >>extend.

    >
    > I've heard rumors that they're looking at relaxing the contract
    > extension rules a bit, but haven't seen anything definite yet.


    Doesn't matter to me. Actually, I switched from Free and Clear to Fair and
    Flexible without a contract extension, but I was in the first three months
    of the contract on my new line.

    >>My beef is with the "activating any phone extends the time to get the
    >>18-month discount" even if you just activate a piece of crap to use while
    >>you're saving money for the phone to replace the one you broke. (That was my
    >>situation a couple months ago.)

    >
    > I've done at least 9 activations that I know of during the past year
    > or so, and none of them extended my New For You status. I assume
    > that's the 18-month discount you're referring to.


    It is indeed. My *actual* *experience* is that buying my wife a phone off
    eBay didn't change her date, and that activating my brother-in-law's old LG
    phone while saving up money to buy a replacement for my broken VI-660
    didn't, but activating the permanent replacement for my 660 - a replacement
    also bought off eBay - did. It's not consistent, and per the norm in
    recent months, you ask three Sprint reps and get seven different responses.

    >The reps at the
    > local store have repeatedly told me that the extension isn't triggered
    > by simply activating a new/different handset on an existing account,
    > but I'll admit that I've heard differing stories in this newsgroup.


    Well, I will always trust the store reps more than the CSRs at *2, since
    most *2 CSRs don't seem to get any training... but...

    --
    JustThe.net - Apple Valley, CA - http://JustThe.net/ - 888.480.4NET (4638)
    Steven J. Sobol, Geek In Charge / [email protected] / PGP: 0xE3AE35ED

    "The wisdom of a fool won't set you free"
    --New Order, "Bizarre Love Triangle"



  8. #8
    O/Siris
    Guest

    Re: switching plans

    In article <[email protected]>, [email protected] says...
    > It is indeed. My *actual* *experience* is that buying my wife a phone off
    > eBay didn't change her date, and that activating my brother-in-law's old LG
    > phone while saving up money to buy a replacement for my broken VI-660
    > didn't, but activating the permanent replacement for my 660 - a replacement
    > also bought off eBay - did. It's not consistent, and per the norm in
    > recent months, you ask three Sprint reps and get seven different responses.
    >


    Explain that to a rep when you reach 18 months' eligibility. As of the
    time I left in July last year, that isn't supposed to to happen, and we
    were supposed to override it if it did.

    Only activating a new phone (never previously used by anyone) should
    reset your "clock" for New For You. In fact:

    http://pcshandsetupgrade.sprint.com/...onditions.html

    "Activating a *new phone* prior to date of eligibility resets your
    eligibility date to 18 months after your most recent new phone
    activation (excludes additional new lines of service)."

    Emphasis is mine, not theirs.

    So, Steve, if that "final" replacement was a brand new, never activated
    phone, then it properly reset your 18-month clock. If it wasn't new,
    then it didn't, and a SprintPCS rep (one of the *2 reps) should manually
    update your account to override what the automated system says. While I
    was there, this consisted of adding on a "transparent" billing code that
    informed the rebate processing center that we had investigated the
    account and found it eligible for the mailin rebate.

    --
    RØß
    O/Siris
    -+-
    A thing moderately good
    is not so good as it ought to be.
    Moderation in temper is always a virtue,
    but moderation in principle is always a vice.
    +Thomas Paine, "The Rights of Man", 1792+



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