only 2100mhz WCDMA on phone, EU/Belgian effect? - General Questions and Answers

Hi,
I'm looking in buying a Chinese smartphone.
Some of them only offer 2100 mhz UMTS/WCDMA/3G comptability.
Will this pose a problem for my mobile browsing?
I heard that only 900 mhz 3G is used for some regions...
I sometimes encounter models with 850 mhz WCDMA comptability , is it to be regarded as 900 mhz (as I thought that's the second 3G frequency used in Belgium/EU?)

Related

Frequency Issue, Help!!!!

I am looking at the Xda and the PDA2K units and am having NO luck getting the info that I need to make a decision. Here is the issue.
I live in Florida and currently have ATT, taken over by Cingular GSM. I am not happy with the Nokia and want to upgrade so I need the frequencys used here. The Idiots at the tech support for Cingular can't seem to furnish the info. I don't want to get a phone that is not usable so if I get a unlocked/unbranded phone and want to use my sims card, which frequencies do I need, 850/1800/1900 or 900/1800/1900???? I am aware that there are Quad band units, but I have noticed that the Triband units seem to have the faster processor and better features. HELP????
phone that works in one frequency band unfortunately can not also work in the frequency band next to it unless added as a specific extra frequency band. For comparison, when you have your FM radio tuned to a radio station at 98.1 MHz, there's no way you'll hear what is happening on another radio station at 98.3 MHz unless you retune your radio.
Which frequencies are used in the US?
Originally, the US used only 1900 MHz for its GSM cell phone service. In the last year or so, there has been a growing amount of GSM service on the 850 MHz band. This type of service will usually be seen in rural areas, because the 850 MHz band has better range than the 1900 MHz band. It can sometimes also found in city areas, particularly if the cell phone company has spare frequencies unused in the 850 MHz band, but no remaining frequencies to use in the 1900 MHz band.
Most of the 850 MHz service belongs to AT&T, and some to Cingular (these two companies are in the process of merging). Although T-Mobile does not (as of July 04) have any of its own 850 MHz service, because it has roaming agreements with both AT&T and Cingular, even a T-mobile user might sometimes find themselves in an area where the only signal available is on 850 MHz.
What about 800 MHz? Is this a fifth band?
Some people refer to the 850 MHz band as being the 800 MHz band. This is incorrect. The actual frequencies in the band are closer to 850 MHz and the standardized naming convention as promulgated by the GSM Association is to refer to this band as '850 MHz'.
If you see someone referring to a phone with 800 MHz service, they probably are simply mistaken and mean to refer to the 850 MHz band.
Do you need both frequencies in the US?
This really depends on the areas in which you use your cell phone. If you're in a major metropolitan area, you probably won't need the 850 MHz band, but if you travel to secondary areas regularly, you will find the extra coverage of the 850 MHz band to be valuable.
Looking into the future, it is probable we'll see increased use of 850 MHz to expand GSM's overall coverage into more of the country.
And then, looking further into the future, it is possible we'll see 1900 MHz coverage duplicating the 850 MHz coverage.
Bottom line : If you travel out of the main cities, you'll definitely benefit from a phone that supports both 850 MHz and 1900 MHz.
Which frequencies are used internationally?
GSM was originally developed in Europe, and only came to the US recently.
Initially, all countries with GSM service used the 900 MHz band. In the past few years, service providers have increasingly been adding 1800 MHz coverage, due to congestion in the 900 MHz band.
When the US started to use GSM, a few other countries with very close links to the US chose to copy the US and use the same frequencies that the US used - first 1900 MHz, and in a few cases, 850 MHz also.
Almost without exception, all international countries that use the non-US international frequency bands have 900 MHz service, and many have some 1800 MHz service as well.
All international countries that have the US frequency bands have 1900 MHz service. A very few might also have some 850 MHz service.
Which frequencies do you need when traveling internationally?
That depends on the countries you plan to visit.
Refer to the table below to get a feeling for which countries use which frequency bands. For a more expanded set of information, complete with network coverage maps, refer to the official GSM Association's website.
As the table suggests, 900 MHz is the most common band used internationally. 1800 MHz will give you expanded coverage in countries that also have 900 MHz. And some countries only have 1900 MHz rather than 900 or 1800 MHz.
Note that countries with both 900 and 1800 MHz service generally provide better coverage in the 900 MHz band than in the 1800 MHz band.
Which bands should you get on your phone?
If used only in the US
If you intend to use your phone only in the US, then get a dual band phone that has both 850 MHz and 1900 MHz.
A single band phone with only 1900 MHz will give almost as good coverage.
If used only internationally
If you intend to use your phone only internationally, then decide if you'll be using the phone in countries that use the international frequencies, or in countries that use the US frequencies, or in both.
If you only need to use the phone in countries with international frequencies, get a dual band 900/1800 MHz phone. A single band phone with only 900 MHz will give reasonably good coverage, but most international phones these days have both bands.
If you need to use the phone in countries that also have the US 1900 MHz frequency, get a tri-band phone with 900/1800/1900 MHz.
If used in both the US and internationally
Two frequencies are 'must have' frequencies - 900 and 1900 MHz. The other two bands are nice to also have, with 1800 MHz typically opening up more of foreign countries than 850 MHz would open up in the US.
Ideally the best solution is to get a quad-band phone with all four bands.
So why not simply buy a quad band phone?
When we first wrote this in July 04 we said 'there are only a very few quad-band phones for sale at present, and they tend to be expensive'. Happily, nine months later, quad band phones have become a lot more common and may even be close to free when you're signing up for new service.
We find the cheapest deals for new phone service are usually those offered at Amazon - see their ad on the left hand side (they have many more models on their site, too). Bizarrely, the prices shown on the Amazon ad are often much higher than the actual prices after special offers on their site - for example, today (March 05) there is a lovely Motorola V551 showing for $74.99, but clicking over to their site shows that after rebates, you actually get the phone for free and $75.10 cash back!
We are aware of the following model quad band phones (if you know of other quad band phones, please let us know so we can update the list)
Geo
GC688
HP
i6315
Motorola
A780
V3 Razr (but not V300)
V180 (note - some people report that Cingular
disables the 1800MHz band, but in theory
these phones should have four bands)
V220
V330
V400
V500 / V501 / V505 / V525 / V551 / V555
V600 / V620
NEC
515 / 525
Palm
Treo 600 / 650
Sharp
GX32
Xda
IIs
WARNING : T-mobile disables the 850 MHz band in the quad band phones it sells. For this reason, you should not buy any quad band phone from T-mobile without getting full formal confirmation from them beforehand that the phone has all four bands fully operational.
http://www.thetravelinsider.info/roadwarriorcontent/quadbandphones.htm

Tweak the radio?

Is there a way to tweak the Captivate radio to switch between the 850 MHz band and the 900 MHz band or turn it into a quad band UMTS handset that can be used as a world phone?
no. If you want the 900 band, get the Vibrant
ua549 said:
Is there a way to tweak the Captivate radio to switch between the 850 MHz band and the 900 MHz band or turn it into a quad band UMTS handset that can be used as a world phone?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
What part of the world would I need 850 that doesn't have a carrier on one of the other 3 bands?
850 is where most iDen phones operate - hence you would need 850 in markets where the operator owns "850" and plans to re-deploy. Lower frequencies yield better coverage and iDen usage is declining.
alphadog00 said:
What part of the world would I need 850 that doesn't have a carrier on one of the other 3 bands?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
North America! There are many places in the US and Canada where 850 MHZ UMTS is all that is available. AT&T is migrating UMTS from the 1900 band to the 850 band. Venezuela requires the 900 MHz band and Europe is moving in that direction as well. Right now I carry two handsets when away from home.
Costa Rica 850 only for 3g...

[Q] Data usage/frequency (3G)

I got Nexus S on ATT and I have tried it with a TMobile SIM (got surprised because phone isn't locked...) but it works on 2G only.
I'm wondering if it will work properly (as 3G) in Europe. Does it cover 900 and 2100?
What is ATT's data frequency? Is it 2100?
thanks !
I'm gonna reply to my own topic: according with Wiki ATT uses 850 MHz and 1900 MHz for UMTS (3G) that means ATT (unlocked) phone will work as 2G in Europe (2100 MHz)
On the other hand, T-Mobile's frequencies are 1700 MHz (uplink) and 2100 MHz (downlink).
Does it mean a T-Mobile phone will be able to work properly on Europe's 3G networks (2100 MHz?

frequency band

I see that Tmobile supports 1700 MHz/2100 MHz, but if i get a phone that only supports 2100 MHz, will I still get the 3G/3.5G?
I'm confused because on repeated frequency bands like "1700 MHz/2100 MHz, 2100 MHz" showed on phone specs
http://www.phonearena.com/phones/compare/HTC-Wildfire-S,HTC-Wildfire-S-T-Mobile/phones/5211,5501
note that Internetional Wildfire S supports only 900, 2100 MHz, while T-mobile Wildfire S supports 1700/2100 MHz, 2100 MHz.
Does Tmobile support only 1700/2100 MHz, or does it also support 2100MHz without the 1700MHz?

Support for 900 & 2100 mhz (3g) ?

Does the relay 4G use the 900 and the 2100 mhz bands ?
Some sites day it does, other say it doesn't.
robuser007 said:
Does the relay 4G use the 900 and the 2100 mhz bands ?
Some sites day it does, other say it doesn't.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
if you're asking if it works for hspa outside of US yes, it does. apparently wcdma is 2100mhz everywhere but in the US
I'm just wondering if 900 Mhz does also work (the phone has it?)

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