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  1. #1
    Dave Mc
    Guest
    Five-year Sprint customer here. Moved into a new home recently, in the
    heart of a fairly upscale suburb in a major metropolitan area.
    (Birmingham, in metro Detroit, for those who care to know.)

    I've had horrendous reception since moving in, despite no apparent
    physical obstructions and the fact that, well, this is a fairly upscale
    suburb in a major metropolitan area. One would think that in 2005, such
    a setting would not leave a user plagued with 90 percent of incoming
    calls going straight to voice mail, or calls in progress getting
    dropped every two minutes.

    Yet that's been the case. I don't keep a landline, and I pay a premium
    price for a premium PCS plan upon which I have long relied for a vast
    majority of my professional work, so it's incredibly frustrating.

    Just as I was on the verge of canceling -- and genuinely disappointed
    by the prospect because I've liked Sprint -- I stumbled onto some
    information online that offered a possible solution: enable roaming.

    "Roaming," of course, used to be a scary word. But Sprint offers $5
    flat-fee monthly roaming plan. I called retention and told 'em this was
    our final shot; they've waived the $5 fee. The very helpful CSR then
    instructed me to switch my roaming mode (in SETTINGS) from "SPRINT" to
    "AUTOMATIC." (He didn't mention disabling CALL GUARD -- which when
    enabled adds a protection against unwanted roaming -- but I figured
    that's a good idea, so I disabled it.)

    All this rambling is leading to a couple of key questions: Am I correct
    in understanding that "AUTOMATIC" allows my phone to access the
    networks of other carriers? And if my recent reception problems have
    indeed been due to a shoddy Sprint signal around here, can this switch
    indeed help?

    What I'm also wondering is how exactly it works. I presume the phone,
    even in "AUTOMATIC," defaults to Sprint mode. If so: How, and at what
    point, would it kick in to looking for another network's signal? Would
    the phone simply recognize that I'm about to lose the Sprint signal,
    and thus do what it needs to do to save my call?

    I ask because since switching to "AUTOMATIC" I'm still looking at a
    phone with no signal bars showing, yet the "R" that would indicate
    roaming is not being displayed either. I'm just curious if I'm missing
    some essential piece of knowledge about the nature of this "AUTOMATIC"
    business.

    Thanks, and pardon the long-windedness.
    DMC




    See More: Roaming: "Sprint" vs "Automatic"




  2. #2
    Leisa
    Guest

    Re: Roaming: "Sprint" vs "Automatic"


    "Dave Mc" <[email protected]> wrote in message
    news:[email protected]...

    > All this rambling is leading to a couple of key questions: Am I correct
    > in understanding that "AUTOMATIC" allows my phone to access the
    > networks of other carriers? And if my recent reception problems have
    > indeed been due to a shoddy Sprint signal around here, can this switch
    > indeed help?
    >
    > What I'm also wondering is how exactly it works. I presume the phone,
    > even in "AUTOMATIC," defaults to Sprint mode. If so: How, and at what
    > point, would it kick in to looking for another network's signal? Would
    > the phone simply recognize that I'm about to lose the Sprint signal,
    > and thus do what it needs to do to save my call?
    >
    > I ask because since switching to "AUTOMATIC" I'm still looking at a
    > phone with no signal bars showing, yet the "R" that would indicate
    > roaming is not being displayed either. I'm just curious if I'm missing
    > some essential piece of knowledge about the nature of this "AUTOMATIC"
    > business.
    >
    > Thanks, and pardon the long-windedness.
    > DMC
    >


    The automatic setting means the phone will look for the strongest signal. It
    will look for a Sprint signal first though, and if it finds one, will stay
    on Sprint. If the phone is staying on Sprint and not roaming even in
    automatic, that would mean the Sprint signal is strong enough to tell the
    phone not to look for other options. You can put the phone in analog and
    roam that way, but the quality may not be as good as the digital roaming
    signal would be. (Sounds like it might be better than the Sprint signal
    you're getting at this location, though.). The roaming plan will cover
    minutes used in analog roam.

    To the best of my knowledge, there's not a way to make the phone switch to
    digital roam if it is finding a Sprint signal. Also, if you are on a call
    and the signal is about to drop, I don't think the tower will hand off the
    call from Sprint to the roaming tower; I believe the call will still drop.
    One of the reasons calls drop while driving when the phone is in automatic
    is because the towers can't hand off from carrier to carrier, or maybe it is
    because the phone can't go back and forth between carriers--regardless of
    the reason, the end result is the same; dropped call. This is why setting
    the phone to Sprint Only will lessen dropped calls usually (not in your
    case, though; I've just gotten off on a tangent, sorry.)

    If I were taking your call, I would want to know if this problem is
    happening only at this location. You also mention this being an upscale
    area, and I wonder if the area is newly built and perhaps the coverage in
    the area can't yet keep up with the number of people moving in. If that's
    the case, you may find that other carriers also have poor coverage at that
    location, which might also explain why the phone is staying on Sprint and
    not going into digital roam. If you haven't already, I would also recommend
    calling *2 and asking for Trouble, and logging a Service/Coverage change
    ticket. When we get the feedback on the ticket, we will find out if this is
    a known problem area or known coverage hole, and usually we can even find
    out if there are any upcoming sites that would improve coverage in the area,
    or if there is no funded solution at this time. If this is already a known
    coverage hole, we may be able to find out without logging a ticket; the
    address may already be flagged in the CS map.

    Leisa





  3. #3
    Mij Adyaw
    Guest

    Re: Roaming: "Sprint" vs "Automatic"

    I had the exact same problem but my provider was Verizon. I had friends come
    over to my home with cell phones from different providers. Sprint was the
    only provider that functioned well at my home so I paid Verizon the ETF and
    switched to Sprint. If you take this route, be careful!!! After you get a
    phone with a new cellular provider, try it in all locations that you will
    use the phone (work, home (all rooms) and other areas that you travel). If
    the phone does not work in all of these areas, you can return it within 14
    days. That is most likely your only realistic options.

    Note that a Sprint phone will lock onto a Sprint signal before choosing a
    roaming provider's signal. Even if the signal is very week to the point of
    being unusable, it will still hang-on to the Sprint signal and will not let
    you roam. The phone will only lock onto a roaming signal if the Sprint
    signal is virtually nonexistent.

    -mij



    "Leisa" <[email protected]> wrote in message
    news:[email protected]...
    >
    > "Dave Mc" <[email protected]> wrote in message
    > news:[email protected]...
    >
    >> All this rambling is leading to a couple of key questions: Am I correct
    >> in understanding that "AUTOMATIC" allows my phone to access the
    >> networks of other carriers? And if my recent reception problems have
    >> indeed been due to a shoddy Sprint signal around here, can this switch
    >> indeed help?
    >>
    >> What I'm also wondering is how exactly it works. I presume the phone,
    >> even in "AUTOMATIC," defaults to Sprint mode. If so: How, and at what
    >> point, would it kick in to looking for another network's signal? Would
    >> the phone simply recognize that I'm about to lose the Sprint signal,
    >> and thus do what it needs to do to save my call?
    >>
    >> I ask because since switching to "AUTOMATIC" I'm still looking at a
    >> phone with no signal bars showing, yet the "R" that would indicate
    >> roaming is not being displayed either. I'm just curious if I'm missing
    >> some essential piece of knowledge about the nature of this "AUTOMATIC"
    >> business.
    >>
    >> Thanks, and pardon the long-windedness.
    >> DMC
    >>

    >
    > The automatic setting means the phone will look for the strongest signal.
    > It will look for a Sprint signal first though, and if it finds one, will
    > stay on Sprint. If the phone is staying on Sprint and not roaming even in
    > automatic, that would mean the Sprint signal is strong enough to tell the
    > phone not to look for other options. You can put the phone in analog and
    > roam that way, but the quality may not be as good as the digital roaming
    > signal would be. (Sounds like it might be better than the Sprint signal
    > you're getting at this location, though.). The roaming plan will cover
    > minutes used in analog roam.
    >
    > To the best of my knowledge, there's not a way to make the phone switch to
    > digital roam if it is finding a Sprint signal. Also, if you are on a call
    > and the signal is about to drop, I don't think the tower will hand off
    > the call from Sprint to the roaming tower; I believe the call will still
    > drop. One of the reasons calls drop while driving when the phone is in
    > automatic is because the towers can't hand off from carrier to carrier, or
    > maybe it is because the phone can't go back and forth between
    > carriers--regardless of the reason, the end result is the same; dropped
    > call. This is why setting the phone to Sprint Only will lessen dropped
    > calls usually (not in your case, though; I've just gotten off on a
    > tangent, sorry.)
    >
    > If I were taking your call, I would want to know if this problem is
    > happening only at this location. You also mention this being an upscale
    > area, and I wonder if the area is newly built and perhaps the coverage in
    > the area can't yet keep up with the number of people moving in. If that's
    > the case, you may find that other carriers also have poor coverage at that
    > location, which might also explain why the phone is staying on Sprint and
    > not going into digital roam. If you haven't already, I would also
    > recommend calling *2 and asking for Trouble, and logging a
    > Service/Coverage change ticket. When we get the feedback on the ticket, we
    > will find out if this is a known problem area or known coverage hole, and
    > usually we can even find out if there are any upcoming sites that would
    > improve coverage in the area, or if there is no funded solution at this
    > time. If this is already a known coverage hole, we may be able to find out
    > without logging a ticket; the address may already be flagged in the CS
    > map.
    >
    > Leisa
    >






  4. #4
    stevie
    Guest

    Re: Roaming: "Sprint" vs "Automatic"

    some interesting questions that you raise.

    when I first purchased my phone, the sales rep said keep the phone in
    'Sprint Only' mode if possible; putting phone in other modes keeps the cell
    phone searching for signals and depletes the battery very fast. I have a
    vga1000.

    also, I have heard that even with the $5 no-roaming charge, you must still
    make the majority of cell calls on the Sprint network. Don't know what
    'majority' means. I think someone told me once that you must make 70%
    percent of calls with Sprint.

    overall, I'm satisfied with Sprint. used them for about a year now.
    haven't had a problem with the small amount of roaming that I have used.

    "Dave Mc" <[email protected]> wrote in message
    news:[email protected]...
    Five-year Sprint customer here. Moved into a new home recently, in the
    heart of a fairly upscale suburb in a major metropolitan area.
    (Birmingham, in metro Detroit, for those who care to know.)

    I've had horrendous reception since moving in, despite no apparent
    physical obstructions and the fact that, well, this is a fairly upscale
    suburb in a major metropolitan area. One would think that in 2005, such
    a setting would not leave a user plagued with 90 percent of incoming
    calls going straight to voice mail, or calls in progress getting
    dropped every two minutes.

    Yet that's been the case. I don't keep a landline, and I pay a premium
    price for a premium PCS plan upon which I have long relied for a vast
    majority of my professional work, so it's incredibly frustrating.

    Just as I was on the verge of canceling -- and genuinely disappointed
    by the prospect because I've liked Sprint -- I stumbled onto some
    information online that offered a possible solution: enable roaming.

    "Roaming," of course, used to be a scary word. But Sprint offers $5
    flat-fee monthly roaming plan. I called retention and told 'em this was
    our final shot; they've waived the $5 fee. The very helpful CSR then
    instructed me to switch my roaming mode (in SETTINGS) from "SPRINT" to
    "AUTOMATIC." (He didn't mention disabling CALL GUARD -- which when
    enabled adds a protection against unwanted roaming -- but I figured
    that's a good idea, so I disabled it.)

    All this rambling is leading to a couple of key questions: Am I correct
    in understanding that "AUTOMATIC" allows my phone to access the
    networks of other carriers? And if my recent reception problems have
    indeed been due to a shoddy Sprint signal around here, can this switch
    indeed help?

    What I'm also wondering is how exactly it works. I presume the phone,
    even in "AUTOMATIC," defaults to Sprint mode. If so: How, and at what
    point, would it kick in to looking for another network's signal? Would
    the phone simply recognize that I'm about to lose the Sprint signal,
    and thus do what it needs to do to save my call?

    I ask because since switching to "AUTOMATIC" I'm still looking at a
    phone with no signal bars showing, yet the "R" that would indicate
    roaming is not being displayed either. I'm just curious if I'm missing
    some essential piece of knowledge about the nature of this "AUTOMATIC"
    business.

    Thanks, and pardon the long-windedness.
    DMC





  5. #5
    Mij Adyaw
    Guest

    Re: Roaming: "Sprint" vs "Automatic"

    50 percent of your calls must be on the Sprint network.

    "stevie" <[email protected]> wrote in message news:[email protected]...
    > some interesting questions that you raise.
    >
    > when I first purchased my phone, the sales rep said keep the phone in
    > 'Sprint Only' mode if possible; putting phone in other modes keeps the
    > cell
    > phone searching for signals and depletes the battery very fast. I have a
    > vga1000.
    >
    > also, I have heard that even with the $5 no-roaming charge, you must still
    > make the majority of cell calls on the Sprint network. Don't know what
    > 'majority' means. I think someone told me once that you must make 70%
    > percent of calls with Sprint.
    >
    > overall, I'm satisfied with Sprint. used them for about a year now.
    > haven't had a problem with the small amount of roaming that I have used.
    >
    > "Dave Mc" <[email protected]> wrote in message
    > news:[email protected]...
    > Five-year Sprint customer here. Moved into a new home recently, in the
    > heart of a fairly upscale suburb in a major metropolitan area.
    > (Birmingham, in metro Detroit, for those who care to know.)
    >
    > I've had horrendous reception since moving in, despite no apparent
    > physical obstructions and the fact that, well, this is a fairly upscale
    > suburb in a major metropolitan area. One would think that in 2005, such
    > a setting would not leave a user plagued with 90 percent of incoming
    > calls going straight to voice mail, or calls in progress getting
    > dropped every two minutes.
    >
    > Yet that's been the case. I don't keep a landline, and I pay a premium
    > price for a premium PCS plan upon which I have long relied for a vast
    > majority of my professional work, so it's incredibly frustrating.
    >
    > Just as I was on the verge of canceling -- and genuinely disappointed
    > by the prospect because I've liked Sprint -- I stumbled onto some
    > information online that offered a possible solution: enable roaming.
    >
    > "Roaming," of course, used to be a scary word. But Sprint offers $5
    > flat-fee monthly roaming plan. I called retention and told 'em this was
    > our final shot; they've waived the $5 fee. The very helpful CSR then
    > instructed me to switch my roaming mode (in SETTINGS) from "SPRINT" to
    > "AUTOMATIC." (He didn't mention disabling CALL GUARD -- which when
    > enabled adds a protection against unwanted roaming -- but I figured
    > that's a good idea, so I disabled it.)
    >
    > All this rambling is leading to a couple of key questions: Am I correct
    > in understanding that "AUTOMATIC" allows my phone to access the
    > networks of other carriers? And if my recent reception problems have
    > indeed been due to a shoddy Sprint signal around here, can this switch
    > indeed help?
    >
    > What I'm also wondering is how exactly it works. I presume the phone,
    > even in "AUTOMATIC," defaults to Sprint mode. If so: How, and at what
    > point, would it kick in to looking for another network's signal? Would
    > the phone simply recognize that I'm about to lose the Sprint signal,
    > and thus do what it needs to do to save my call?
    >
    > I ask because since switching to "AUTOMATIC" I'm still looking at a
    > phone with no signal bars showing, yet the "R" that would indicate
    > roaming is not being displayed either. I'm just curious if I'm missing
    > some essential piece of knowledge about the nature of this "AUTOMATIC"
    > business.
    >
    > Thanks, and pardon the long-windedness.
    > DMC
    >
    >






  6. #6
    Jerome Zelinske
    Guest

    Re: Roaming: "Sprint" vs "Automatic"

    You said you were having dropped calls. Is also the signal being lost
    completely? On my phone, when ever it regains a Sprint PCS signal it
    beeps. My old phone would both beep in and out. If you are not losing
    signal completely, I don't think setting the phone to automatic will
    help much.



  7. #7
    Floyd I Johnson
    Guest

    Re: Roaming: "Sprint" vs "Automatic"

    My wife and I had the same problem with no signal and dropped calls at our
    home. We both got new Sanyo phones(7400&8200), and the difference is
    dramatic, like we are on a different carrier now. Our old phones worked OK
    everywhere but our house. Maybe you could try a Sanyo phone before bailing
    from Sprint?





  8. #8
    Steve Sobol
    Guest

    Re: Roaming: "Sprint" vs "Automatic"

    Dave Mc wrote:
    > Five-year Sprint customer here. Moved into a new home recently, in the
    > heart of a fairly upscale suburb in a major metropolitan area.
    > (Birmingham, in metro Detroit, for those who care to know.)


    Maybe there are a bunch of NIMBYs in your community that refuse to let anyone
    place towers anywhere near them. You ought to find out whether other carriers'
    customers have the same problems in the area around your new home.

    > "Roaming," of course, used to be a scary word. But Sprint offers $5
    > flat-fee monthly roaming plan. I called retention and told 'em this was
    > our final shot; they've waived the $5 fee. The very helpful CSR then
    > instructed me to switch my roaming mode (in SETTINGS) from "SPRINT" to
    > "AUTOMATIC." (He didn't mention disabling CALL GUARD -- which when
    > enabled adds a protection against unwanted roaming -- but I figured
    > that's a good idea, so I disabled it.)
    >
    > All this rambling is leading to a couple of key questions: Am I correct
    > in understanding that "AUTOMATIC" allows my phone to access the
    > networks of other carriers? And if my recent reception problems have
    > indeed been due to a shoddy Sprint signal around here, can this switch
    > indeed help?


    Yes. Automatic means automatically roam if a Sprint signal can not be found.
    Keep in mind that if more than 50% of your airtime in any given month is not on
    Sprint's network, they reserve the right to warn you and then terminate the
    roaming addon if usage continues that way.

    --
    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"



  9. #9
    Steve Sobol
    Guest

    Re: Roaming: "Sprint" vs "Automatic"

    stevie wrote:
    > some interesting questions that you raise.
    >
    > when I first purchased my phone, the sales rep said keep the phone in
    > 'Sprint Only' mode if possible; putting phone in other modes keeps the cell
    > phone searching for signals and depletes the battery very fast. I have a
    > vga1000.


    Well, since "roaming" still means analog in many areas, yes, it can deplete the
    battery quickly.

    >
    > also, I have heard that even with the $5 no-roaming charge, you must still
    > make the majority of cell calls on the Sprint network. Don't know what
    > 'majority' means. I think someone told me once that you must make 70%
    > percent of calls with Sprint.


    50%.



    --
    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"



  10. #10
    Steve Sobol
    Guest

    Re: Roaming: "Sprint" vs "Automatic"

    Floyd I Johnson wrote:
    > My wife and I had the same problem with no signal and dropped calls at our
    > home. We both got new Sanyo phones(7400&8200), and the difference is
    > dramatic, like we are on a different carrier now. Our old phones worked OK
    > everywhere but our house. Maybe you could try a Sanyo phone before bailing
    > from Sprint?


    The question is which phone Dave has currently... Sanyos aren't the only Sprint
    phones with good reception.

    --
    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"



  11. #11

    Re: Roaming: "Sprint" vs "Automatic"

    I'm not sure if you're already from the Detroit area, but you can bet
    your ass that your reception will never improve while you live in
    "Upscale" Birmingham.

    NIMBY= Not In My Back Yard. NO NEW CELL TOWERS FOR YOU.

    Sometimes money blocks progress.

    Birmingham folks oppose just about everything. Parks, towers, etc.
    Anything that may be too close to their Utopia. This pops up in the
    Free Press at least once a month. Some story about something new, and
    needed, but nobody wants to look at it or have it around.

    Not shredding on you personally, But quite a few us pay a "Premium
    Price" to sprint every month. I live by ann arbor, reception around
    here is killer, just about everywhere. I can even talk in my basement.

    You should have moved to the Pointes. Good cell reception, plus the
    money's older. Tons of towers flanking the Detroit border.




    Dave Mc wrote:
    > Five-year Sprint customer here. Moved into a new home recently, in

    the
    > heart of a fairly upscale suburb in a major metropolitan area.
    > (Birmingham, in metro Detroit, for those who care to know.)
    >
    > I've had horrendous reception since moving in, despite no apparent
    > physical obstructions and the fact that, well, this is a fairly

    upscale
    > suburb in a major metropolitan area. One would think that in 2005,

    such
    > a setting would not leave a user plagued with 90 percent of incoming
    > calls going straight to voice mail, or calls in progress getting
    > dropped every two minutes.
    >
    > Yet that's been the case. I don't keep a landline, and I pay a

    premium
    > price for a premium PCS plan upon which I have long relied for a vast
    > majority of my professional work, so it's incredibly frustrating.
    >
    > Just as I was on the verge of canceling -- and genuinely disappointed
    > by the prospect because I've liked Sprint -- I stumbled onto some
    > information online that offered a possible solution: enable roaming.
    >
    > "Roaming," of course, used to be a scary word. But Sprint offers $5
    > flat-fee monthly roaming plan. I called retention and told 'em this

    was
    > our final shot; they've waived the $5 fee. The very helpful CSR then
    > instructed me to switch my roaming mode (in SETTINGS) from "SPRINT"

    to
    > "AUTOMATIC." (He didn't mention disabling CALL GUARD -- which when
    > enabled adds a protection against unwanted roaming -- but I figured
    > that's a good idea, so I disabled it.)
    >
    > All this rambling is leading to a couple of key questions: Am I

    correct
    > in understanding that "AUTOMATIC" allows my phone to access the
    > networks of other carriers? And if my recent reception problems have
    > indeed been due to a shoddy Sprint signal around here, can this

    switch
    > indeed help?
    >
    > What I'm also wondering is how exactly it works. I presume the phone,
    > even in "AUTOMATIC," defaults to Sprint mode. If so: How, and at what
    > point, would it kick in to looking for another network's signal?

    Would
    > the phone simply recognize that I'm about to lose the Sprint signal,
    > and thus do what it needs to do to save my call?
    >
    > I ask because since switching to "AUTOMATIC" I'm still looking at a
    > phone with no signal bars showing, yet the "R" that would indicate
    > roaming is not being displayed either. I'm just curious if I'm

    missing
    > some essential piece of knowledge about the nature of this

    "AUTOMATIC"
    > business.
    >
    > Thanks, and pardon the long-windedness.
    > DMC





  12. #12
    Tinman
    Guest

    Re: Roaming: "Sprint" vs "Automatic"

    Steve Sobol wrote:
    > Dave Mc wrote:
    >> Five-year Sprint customer here. Moved into a new home recently, in
    >> the heart of a fairly upscale suburb in a major metropolitan area.
    >> (Birmingham, in metro Detroit, for those who care to know.)

    >
    > Maybe there are a bunch of NIMBYs in your community that refuse to
    > let anyone place towers anywhere near them.


    That would be my bet.


    > You ought to find out
    > whether other carriers' customers have the same problems in the area
    > around your new home.


    He did state that the phone didn't roam at all when placed on Automatic.
    Granted, SPCS will hang to its own signal to the bitter end before
    roaming. But I would still have expected it to at least cycle to roam a
    few times. Sounds to me like there are simply not enough towers, period.
    The real test, of course, would be to see what happens when placing the
    phone on Roam, rather than Automatic.

    I had to deal with a bunch of NIMBYs when Sprint came into my city. SPCS
    went out of their way to hide and disguise the towers, but two NIMBYs
    still filed a lawsuit to prevent the towers' operation (they were
    already built and ready to go). Those two people happened to be the only
    two not notified of the tower's construction (what a coincidence). Guess
    why? They weren't on the county clerk's list of property-owners, which
    SPCS (actually SBA) used to send notices to. When SBA/SPCS uncovered
    this, they filed a (IIRC) federal suite against the county. Amazingly,
    the permits to begin operating were granted nearly immediately, as long
    as the SPCS/SBA's suite was dropped.

    I should note that I know (knew) one of the NIMBYs. I can say with
    certainty that he would have been screaming the loudest about lack of
    reception had the very same towers he tried to ban, been taken down.


    --
    Mike





  13. #13
    Dave Mc
    Guest

    Re: Roaming: "Sprint" vs "Automatic"

    Thanks very much to all for your insight and information. Very helpful
    stuff, and great newsgroup.

    Latest update: The automatic setting doesn't seem to have helped
    anything at all. It never appears to actually roam, and the Sprint
    signal still fades out completely then back in (and yes, with the
    phone beeping each time, as one poster noted).

    What has worked is setting the phone -- a new Sanyo 8200, for those
    who'd wondered -- to analog roaming. There, the reception has been
    perfectly fine. I don't know what that's supposed to tell me, except
    that I'm OK being all 1996 if that's what it takes to get a signal.

    I am curious about the "50 percent Sprint" figure a couple of folks
    threw out regarding the monthly roaming service. Are you saying 50
    percent of the number of CALLS must be pure Sprint, or 50 percent of
    the number of MINUTES used? I'm gonna poke around the PCS website and
    see what I can find, but my retention fellow didn't say anything about
    this part at all. (Not that THAT means anything!)

    Again, I appreciate all the feedback. I've gotta stop lurking here and
    start posting more.

    DMc



  14. #14
    Dave Mc
    Guest

    Re: Roaming: "Sprint" vs "Automatic"

    Just got my own answer by rereading Steve Sobol's post: It's 50
    percent of MINUTES (airtime), not calls.

    Thanks.

    On Mon, 02 May 2005 18:55:28 -0400, Dave Mc <[email protected]> wrote:

    >Thanks very much to all for your insight and information. Very helpful
    >stuff, and great newsgroup.
    >
    >Latest update: The automatic setting doesn't seem to have helped
    >anything at all. It never appears to actually roam, and the Sprint
    >signal still fades out completely then back in (and yes, with the
    >phone beeping each time, as one poster noted).
    >
    >What has worked is setting the phone -- a new Sanyo 8200, for those
    >who'd wondered -- to analog roaming. There, the reception has been
    >perfectly fine. I don't know what that's supposed to tell me, except
    >that I'm OK being all 1996 if that's what it takes to get a signal.
    >
    >I am curious about the "50 percent Sprint" figure a couple of folks
    >threw out regarding the monthly roaming service. Are you saying 50
    >percent of the number of CALLS must be pure Sprint, or 50 percent of
    >the number of MINUTES used? I'm gonna poke around the PCS website and
    >see what I can find, but my retention fellow didn't say anything about
    >this part at all. (Not that THAT means anything!)
    >
    >Again, I appreciate all the feedback. I've gotta stop lurking here and
    >start posting more.
    >
    >DMc





  15. #15
    Steve Sobol
    Guest

    Re: Roaming: "Sprint" vs "Automatic"

    Dave Mc wrote:

    > I am curious about the "50 percent Sprint" figure a couple of folks
    > threw out regarding the monthly roaming service. Are you saying 50
    > percent of the number of CALLS must be pure Sprint, or 50 percent of
    > the number of MINUTES used? I'm gonna poke around the PCS website and
    > see what I can find, but my retention fellow didn't say anything about
    > this part at all. (Not that THAT means anything!)


    Minutes.

    Check the literature at your local Sprint store for details. (Check a brochure
    that lists calling plans.)

    --
    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"



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