denslexusgx470 Posted February 19, 2005 Posted February 19, 2005 I have a question about GSM frequencies. Let's say that abroad, there is a company (like Cingular, T-Mobile) that has GSM 900/1800 and my phone is frequencies 850/1800/1900, does that mean i need to have both 900 and 1800 to work in that country or is one frequency good enough??? here's the link to the different cell companies in the Philippines, which I want to know. I use SMART over there. http://www.gsmworld.com/roaming/gsminfo/cou_ph.shtml
SW03ES Posted February 19, 2005 Posted February 19, 2005 No, it just means the phone will only work on the 1800 frequency and may not have as full coverage as it would if it could move back and forth.
ArmyofOne Posted February 19, 2005 Posted February 19, 2005 No, it just means the phone will only work on the 1800 frequency and may not have as full coverage as it would if it could move back and forth. ← steve is right. tri and quad band phones are a way to make your coverage more broad overseas. Instead of having only 1 band to choose from, your phone has 2 sets, or pairs, of bands. you can select the bands individually on a motorola. 850MHz 900MHz 1800MHz 1900MHz AFAIK, Cingular is still mostly tri band. AT&T is all quad band in their GSM line (which last i checked was all of their phones i think) GSM is still improving and it will get better as the years go by. Basically the way it works, your phone instantaneously chooses between bands. if you try to make a call, it will choose the one with the best reception (in the case of a motorola phone , you can choose to select the band yourself for the best area you have.) the bands are paired in the following order: 850/1900 900/1800 (i think) meaning in automatic mode, you can never use just one band unless the other is not available. The phone uses 2 to give you optimum performance. it can also mix and match. so if the 2 strongest signals come from 850/1800, it can pair those 2 together. if you have a motorola GSM phone go here: Menu---->Network-----> where is says "band" highlight the word "automatic" and then push the upper right hand key marked "Change" on the menu. your choices should come up.
denslexusgx470 Posted February 19, 2005 Author Posted February 19, 2005 No, it just means the phone will only work on the 1800 frequency and may not have as full coverage as it would if it could move back and forth. ← steve is right. tri and quad band phones are a way to make your coverage more broad overseas. Instead of having only 1 band to choose from, your phone has 2 sets, or pairs, of bands. you can select the bands individually on a motorola. 850MHz 900MHz 1800MHz 1900MHz AFAIK, Cingular is still mostly tri band. AT&T is all quad band in their GSM line (which last i checked was all of their phones i think) GSM is still improving and it will get better as the years go by. Basically the way it works, your phone instantaneously chooses between bands. if you try to make a call, it will choose the one with the best reception (in the case of a motorola phone , you can choose to select the band yourself for the best area you have.) the bands are paired in the following order: 850/1900 900/1800 (i think) meaning in automatic mode, you can never use just one band unless the other is not available. The phone uses 2 to give you optimum performance. it can also mix and match. so if the 2 strongest signals come from 850/1800, it can pair those 2 together. if you have a motorola GSM phone go here: Menu---->Network-----> where is says "band" highlight the word "automatic" and then push the upper right hand key marked "Change" on the menu. your choices should come up. ← that's my debate within myself whether to get the Motorola V551 or the Lg L1400 (it looks high-tech lol) and now since i'm getting a new phone, i want to make it work in my country when i visit!!! <_< :D
SKperformance Posted February 20, 2005 Posted February 20, 2005 Get a quad it is easy for the bandwidth capabilities . Especially since Canada has gone quad as well.
denslexusgx470 Posted February 20, 2005 Author Posted February 20, 2005 Get a quad it is easy for the bandwidth capabilities . Especially since Canada has gone quad as well. ← yeah, that's what i'm kinda leaning on. Thanks guys!!
lexus ls430 Posted March 15, 2005 Posted March 15, 2005 i currently have a gsm phone and poor reception
blake918 Posted March 15, 2005 Posted March 15, 2005 Den, don't get the LG. I have a LG, and it sucks. It's cheaply built and not very resiliant when it flies out of your hands. I'll be getting either the V551 or V600 in the comming months when I switch to Cingular from VZW(don't even get me started with them ). Plus, if you ever have a problemo, I'm sure Army would make sure it's fixed properly.
ArmyofOne Posted March 16, 2005 Posted March 16, 2005 Den, don't get the LG. I have a LG, and it sucks. It's cheaply built and not very resiliant when it flies out of your hands. I'll be getting either the V551 or V600 in the comming months when I switch to Cingular from VZW(don't even get me started with them ). Plus, if you ever have a problemo, I'm sure Army would make sure it's fixed properly. ← i most certianly would :)
denslexusgx470 Posted March 18, 2005 Author Posted March 18, 2005 Den, don't get the LG. I have a LG, and it sucks. It's cheaply built and not very resiliant when it flies out of your hands. I'll be getting either the V551 or V600 in the comming months when I switch to Cingular from VZW(don't even get me started with them ). Plus, if you ever have a problemo, I'm sure Army would make sure it's fixed properly. ← really?? strange because the previous phone before the new one i have was an LG TP5250 (the most high-tech phone back then) and it lasted me 3 years with about 10-15 cement/asphalt drops.
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