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- 07-18-2004, 09:15 AM #1richGuest
Sprint sells tri-mode phones - so I was wondering if they will ever
start to use/promote that functionality. From a customer point of view,
digital roaming on 800 CDMA would be much preferable over analog. Better
building penetration, range, than 1900, and save your battery.
Would not also it be cheaper to them to buy digital roam mintues? That
way, they could offer up a reasonably priced plan that featured digital
roaming at a preferred rate.
Why do they sell these phones if they are not going to start actually
using digital roaming? The SPCS web site for years has mentioned
digital roaming, but they never show anywhere where you can actually do
it.
› See More: Sprint and Tri-Mode phones
- 07-18-2004, 09:37 AM #2Bob SmithGuest
Re: Sprint and Tri-Mode phones
"rich" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Sprint sells tri-mode phones - so I was wondering if they will ever
> start to use/promote that functionality. From a customer point of view,
> digital roaming on 800 CDMA would be much preferable over analog. Better
> building penetration, range, than 1900, and save your battery.
>
Yes, they do ... It's advisable that you add the F&CA option to your account
if you find your phone is roaming a lot.
>
> Would not also it be cheaper to them to buy digital roam mintues? That
> way, they could offer up a reasonably priced plan that featured digital
> roaming at a preferred rate.
It all depends on the roaming agreement they make with the provider in a
particular area.
>
> Why do they sell these phones if they are not going to start actually
> using digital roaming?
Huhhh? Lots of us have digitally roamed on 1900 & 800.
> The SPCS web site for years has mentioned
> digital roaming, but they never show anywhere where you can actually do
> it.
Sure it does ... http://tinyurl.com/5ou6v
Bob
- 07-18-2004, 01:06 PM #3EvadGuest
Re: Sprint and Tri-Mode phones
"Bob Smith" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> "rich" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>
> Sure it does ... http://tinyurl.com/5ou6v
>
But, does Vision work when roaming 800MHz , and I mean Data Mode too.??
And, if it does, how fast is the data on roaming?
Evad
- 07-18-2004, 01:33 PM #4Jerome ZelinskeGuest
Re: Sprint and Tri-Mode phones
You are correct, if you have to roam, roaming digitally on 1900 or
800 MHz would be preferable to roaming analog on 800 MHz, as far as
signal/sound quality and some battery use. I do not know of 800 MHz
digital would penetrate buildings any better than 800 MHz analog. For
those that have to roam, they do have the F & C America option. I think
it is given the promotion that it deserves. Most have already picked
the provider that they have to roam the least or never with. Most
customers of the major carriers seldom/never have to roam. As for
saving the battery, there would be less consumption due to the shorter
xmitter duty cycle, but the power output when xmitting would be the
same, I think. As far as where, that would depend on if there are
carriers in an area with digital service, and if they have a roaming
agreement, how that agreement's rates compare with any other roaming
partner as to where the digital carrier is on the prl. The prl is what
chooses from the signals being currently received which mode you will use.
rich wrote:
> Sprint sells tri-mode phones - so I was wondering if they will ever
> start to use/promote that functionality. From a customer point of view,
> digital roaming on 800 CDMA would be much preferable over analog. Better
> building penetration, range, than 1900, and save your battery.
>
>
>
> Would not also it be cheaper to them to buy digital roam mintues? That
> way, they could offer up a reasonably priced plan that featured digital
> roaming at a preferred rate.
>
>
>
> Why do they sell these phones if they are not going to start actually
> using digital roaming? The SPCS web site for years has mentioned
> digital roaming, but they never show anywhere where you can actually do
> it.
- 07-18-2004, 01:34 PM #5Jerome ZelinskeGuest
Re: Sprint and Tri-Mode phones
No, and not roaming 1900 MHz either.
Evad wrote:
> "Bob Smith" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>
>>"rich" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>>news:[email protected]...
>>
>>Sure it does ... http://tinyurl.com/5ou6v
>>
>
>
> But, does Vision work when roaming 800MHz , and I mean Data Mode too.??
> And, if it does, how fast is the data on roaming?
>
> Evad
>
>
>
- 07-19-2004, 05:55 AM #6Bob SmithGuest
Re: Sprint and Tri-Mode phones
"Evad" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> "Bob Smith" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
> >
> > "rich" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> > news:[email protected]...
> >
> > Sure it does ... http://tinyurl.com/5ou6v
> >
>
> But, does Vision work when roaming 800MHz , and I mean Data Mode too.??
> And, if it does, how fast is the data on roaming?
>
> Evad
Nope ... as Jerome mentioned. Once you are roaming, on any freq, all you can
do is make voice calls.
Bob
- 07-19-2004, 10:08 AM #7MikeGuest
Re: Sprint and Tri-Mode phones
Jerome Zelinske wrote:
> You are correct, if you have to roam, roaming digitally on 1900 or
> 800 MHz would be preferable to roaming analog on 800 MHz, as far as
> signal/sound quality and some battery use. I do not know of 800 MHz
> digital would penetrate buildings any better than 800 MHz analog. For
> those that have to roam, they do have the F & C America option. I think
> it is given the promotion that it deserves. Most have already picked
> the provider that they have to roam the least or never with. Most
> customers of the major carriers seldom/never have to roam. As for
> saving the battery, there would be less consumption due to the shorter
> xmitter duty cycle, but the power output when xmitting would be the
> same, I think. As far as where, that would depend on if there are
> carriers in an area with digital service, and if they have a roaming
> agreement, how that agreement's rates compare with any other roaming
> partner as to where the digital carrier is on the prl. The prl is what
> chooses from the signals being currently received which mode you will use.
>
Insightful. I'd add that the transmit power on digital will very rarely
be as high as analog in practice, though the transmitter may have the
ability to transmit at the same power. CDMA phones tend not to transmit
with very much power, even when compared to other digital phones.
Also, the maximum output power is likely to vary on different bands, and
would be a phone-specific specification.
-mike
- 01-07-2005, 02:14 PM #8Bob SmithGuest
Re: Sprint and Tri-Mode phones
"Mij Adyaw" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:COyDd.14996$yW5.5572@fed1read02...
> Will you receive the voicemail indicator and text messages when roaming?
On occasion, I have ... but it's been so long since I was roaming for any
length of time, in a Vegas hotel IIRC before SPCS expanded coverage in LV, I
can't tell you whether it was one or the other, or both that I received.
Bob
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