penataband for Europe? - Samsung Galaxy Nexus

Sometime a go, there was a thread about variants of GNEX, from comments I understand that all GSM are same, only radio software is different,
but on some sites it not mention all 5 3G bands, and only 3 for Europe,
also what about 2.4 and 5 Ghz for WIFI? is it also suffers for Europe or something? or not? I kind of stuck, I really want the device with all standard accessories, mostly the charger, and not search for it, after I buy,
and also be sure it support 850 & 2100 for 3G, the S have also many variants, as SII have toooo many of them, so how can I find out about that issue?

As I said in the other thread... They're all pentaband. Every single model. And yes they support 5ghz wifi.

martonikaj said:
As I said in the other thread... They're all pentaband. Every single model. And yes they support 5ghz wifi.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well all but the CDMA (Verizon USA model)
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using Tapatalk

_Dennis_ said:
Well all but the CDMA (Verizon USA model)
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sorry yes. Obviously. You would've had to read the really long thread before where OP wouldn't take my word for it that any i9250 is pentaband...

I think I got it now, I just used to that for US & EU have different frequency devices, see I used to work to one of the mobile manufacturers, and we have sometime 2 type of devices, one for EU and other for US, and maybe it's hard to believe that unicorns exists, heh on the second hand, on old GSM it also not always a "world" phones so it do make sense,
and another funny thing, also 850 band I actually US, here in Israel we use it..because of the ARMY ...to make things even worse, the QUAD GSM no worth to much, as 2 of our providers that still have GSM, have only 1 frequency, the solution was to "share" the networks ,We do have HSPA+, but the future will be LTE ..dunno why, also no 4G here ,the mobile internet cost to much and slow as ****

Related

[Q] Anyone know of an "all bands" 3g Android phone?

Given the fun and FUD surrounding the AT&T-Mobile merge, does anyone know of an Android phone that can play 3g on *anyone's* GSM network? I noticed that the crApple Ipuke 4 has 4 3g bands (presumably so they can have "One SKU to connect them all") Are there any Droids with that capability?
There are some phones listed as "Coming Soon" under the tmo site that have all bands. I'm not sure that any are available at this time.
tronmech said:
Given the fun and FUD surrounding the AT&T-Mobile merge, does anyone know of an Android phone that can play 3g on *anyone's* GSM network? I noticed that the crApple Ipuke 4 has 4 3g bands (presumably so they can have "One SKU to connect them all") Are there any Droids with that capability?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So far the only phone capable of ALL GSM Bands is Nokia N8. No Android or Windows or the Apple is capable of doing so as of now... iPhone doesn't support 1700...
AT&T might have such a phone in future if the merger ever happens... And man, that will be an awesome feeling to have a phone of my choice of OS and I don't have to bother being restricted with one career...
I am worried, if Canada will ever see that phone... :-(
The Samsung Vibrant has the 1900 band which works for AT&T (AT&T use 850,1900), so it may cover all area, but it works in NYC
Sent from my HTC Vision using XDA App
creativedevil said:
... And man, that will be an awesome feeling to have a phone of my choice of OS and I don't have to bother being restricted with one career...
(
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Lol cell phone career giving you choice? Thats the best joke i have ever heard
Not sure what the original question is exactly, because GSM is really only one band around 900 Mhz. My understanding is this is normally used for EDGE, and 3G speeds / HSPA usually occurs only on the much higher frequencies.
And technically speaking, there is no GSM in the Americas, only in Eurasia. Here we have 850Mhz which should be referred to as CLR not GSM.
But if you're talking about Android phones that are 3G capable on both AWS frequencies (T-Mobile) and PCS (AT&T, Bell), check out the newly-announced LG G2X. Appears to have frequency bands for both, as well of course as CLR (Edge speeds).
The iPhone 4 does *NOT* have such a radio.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UMTS_frequency_bands
The N1 has you covered on most bands, but not quite all of them. By the time the merger goes through, though, there will probably be more and better options.
linkmaster_6 said:
Lol cell phone career giving you choice? Thats the best joke i have ever heard
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hahaha very funny, isn't it? Well, its not... cuz you obviously didn't get the point... Its not a choice given by career, its about the the contracts you have to go with... and if there ever is a phone which can support all the frequencies, it will give an option to switch between any GSM providers. Currently it is only possible with Nokia N8...
The G2x should support all popular bands.
Sent from my HTC Vision using XDA Premium App
Anomaly said:
The G2x should support all popular bands.
Sent from my HTC Vision using XDA Premium App
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Unfortunately it doesn't for 3G connection.
http://www.gsmarena.com/t_mobile_g2x-3888.php

[SOLVED] T989 works on ATT 3G

Tmobile website listed 850mzh umts, anyone tried with att sim yet? or we need to unlock the phone first?
yes this phone works on all carriers
do we have to unlock first? or phone comes unlocked?
excellent question
i'd like to know that too, as i'm waiting for it as well
he was referring to weather or not it supports at&t HSPA+
shapiro1234567890 said:
he was referring to weather or not it supports at&t HSPA+
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
and that was the answer...
TMONews.com alludes to this question as well...
I guess Allgamer confirmed the million dollar question for all of us
I guess this will be my future-proof phone (at&t merger or not) for the next year or so.
this is definitely the best phone for a while, until another beast comes along on a quad band hspda+
this phone is literally a 4x4
you can switch to any GSM cell phone provider that you want with the same phone without thinking twice.
i just bought the phone full price.
on the phone box it listed.
gsm 850, 900, 1800, 1900.
umts band 1 (2100), band II (1900), band iv (1700), band V (850)!
so this phone does supports 850/1900 3g too!
Well this is good news at least... I guess this phone is the lube that will make the brutal takeover a bit less painful.
It passed the FCC with AT&T 3G support, there is NO question that it has AT&T 3G support.
heygrl said:
It passed the FCC with AT&T 3G support, there is NO question that it has AT&T 3G support.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So did another recent (in the past 6 months) T-Mobile phone, the G2x. The specs said it etc. I wasn't until after the phone was released and some people actually tried it that they found out it didn't work.
Same caution should go with this device, until someone puts a bloody AT&T sim in it and gets a testable connection treat the specs, web and box with a grain of salt.
rahlquist said:
So did another recent (in the past 6 months) T-Mobile phone, the G2x. The specs said it etc. I wasn't until after the phone was released and some people actually tried it that they found out it didn't work.
Same caution should go with this device, until someone puts a bloody AT&T sim in it and gets a testable connection treat the specs, web and box with a grain of salt.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
No, the G2X was not tested by the FCC for AT&T 3G
heygrl said:
No, the G2X was not tested by the FCC for AT&T 3G
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sorry again part of the confusions surrounding the G2X was a possible misstating by several blogs. http://pocketnow.com/android/lg-p999-passes-fcc-is-t-mobiles-g2x for example.
In the end though even if the FCC tests the phone to support those frequencies, the manuf lists the support and t-mob lists the support, until its tested by multiple users I wouldn't believe it. Sorry but I have been burned by to many manuf lies (I own a captivate need I say more) and too much incorrect information.
rahlquist said:
Sorry again part of the confusions surrounding the G2X was a possible misstating by several blogs. http://pocketnow.com/android/lg-p999-passes-fcc-is-t-mobiles-g2x for example.
In the end though even if the FCC tests the phone to support those frequencies, the manuf lists the support and t-mob lists the support, until its tested by multiple users I wouldn't believe it. Sorry but I have been burned by to many manuf lies (I own a captivate need I say more) and too much incorrect information.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That model number is for a different LG G2X that T-Mobile didn't sell.
The T-Mobile Galaxy S II is IDENTICAL to the Telus Galaxy S II X - it has 850/1700/1900 WCDMA bands. You can stop the skepticism.
heygrl said:
That model number is for a different LG G2X that T-Mobile didn't sell.
The T-Mobile Galaxy S II is IDENTICAL to the Telus Galaxy S II X - it has 850/1700/1900 WCDMA bands. You can stop the skepticism.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ahhh so if they are identical then I presume someone tested it on that one?
Specs schmecks like I said until tested its rumored to be supported. I'd love to see confirmations from a reputable source that they have taken an AT&T sim and popped it in. Until that happens people should be cautious is all I am saying. Don't buy a phone and get locked into a contract for a spec thats unproven. Just because the hardware support is there doesn't mean the software can even use it.
I'm not skeptical of that which is proven but I am cynical of that which is quoted without proof. It' not you, or anyone else in this thread but after a years of dealing with telco and manufacturer broken promises, half truth's and specs that are just this side of outright lies...
did LG G2x listed umts 850/1900 on phone box?
this tmobile galaxy s2 does listed umts 850/1900 on phone box!
that is like saying on a honda sticker it listed 500 hp and the car only has 200hp, that' fault advertising, you can sue them!
That is true, they speculated that the G2x COULD have AT&T 3G but didn't "unlock" the feature. There is only one true way to figure this all out, that is to unlock the phone and try an AT&T 3G sim in it
netnerd said:
did LG G2x listed umts 850/1900 on phone box?
this tmobile galaxy s2 does listed umts 850/1900 on phone box!
that is like saying on a honda sticker it listed 500 hp and the car only has 200hp, that' fault advertising, you can sue them!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
My captivate listed on the box it had a gps, oh its got one allright but it aint worth a crap.
Just because the box says it has it doesn't mean it functions well. It just means its present. It may drop a AT&T 3g call every second due to a software bug that may never get fixed.
Then again it may have a better tuned antenna than the AT&T SGS II and get better reception. We just dont know. We know what the marketing material says but they doe come out and say oops sometimes.
ok guys... this conversation is getting a bit derailed.
The original question and answer is for the SGH-T989 nothing to do with the LG G2x
so stop comparing Orange vs Lemons, or at least make a new topic for your comparison, instead of hijacking this topic
Thanks

[Q] Galaxy Nexus GSM + Telstra 4G LTE

I figured this would be the best place for a post. I have a GSM Galaxy Nexus in Australia and with Telstra's new 4G LTE network being recently introduced, is there anyway I could enable my device to pick up the signal? It should be on the standard 1800MHz frequency, though it may not be prioritising it as the connection if that's the case.
It should technically be possible assuming the phone can pick up 1800MHz (which after some searching, it can afaik). It's more of a question of how.
Thanks in advance.
I don't believe this is possible but I sure do hope it could be.
I am in a Telstra 4G LTE area but currently using Next-G.
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using xda premium
Simmo3D said:
I don't believe this is possible but I sure do hope it could be.
I am in a Telstra 4G LTE area but currently using Next-G.
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using xda premium
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
They are apparently to be getting an upgrade via Telstra to support LTE, so it should be possible. Unless I was lied to, which is always possible when you put the back-of-house tech guys on the spot. This will apparently be happening late in the year though, and it seems stupid to wait that long when the facilities are already there to be used.
I thought the GN was only capable of 21Mbps max.
Looking through the specs, GSM GPRS and EDGE support 1800MHz but HSPA does not...
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using xda premium
The Telstra HSPA uses 850MHz band from memory, the new Telstra LTE uses 1800MHz. Even if the device is limited to 21Mbps, I'd at least like to be able to get to that speed.
Hoping someone knows how.
GSM and LTE are two different platforms. It's like trying to use a AMD processor in a Intel socket. It just doesn't work.
zephiK said:
GSM and LTE are two different platforms. It's like trying to use a AMD processor in a Intel socket. It just doesn't work.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So even though it has the capability to pick up 1800MHz, it's impossible to utilise it?
Antonioffaxii said:
So even though it has the capability to pick up 1800MHz, it's impossible to utilise it?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Most likely, yes.
That's odd, and disappointing
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using xda premium
Well,
There are LTE versions around, and I'm wondering whether they will work with Telstra or not. Another question is about possibility of flashing LTE firmware onto GSM phone and recovering it back if something goes wrong. Has anybody tried that?
Avalonnw said:
Well,
There are LTE versions around, and I'm wondering whether they will work with Telstra or not.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It will not work. There aren't "LTE versions". There is 1 LTE version being sold (1 more on the way for Sprint), and its a CDMA/LTE device from Verizon USA.
Another question is about possibility of flashing LTE firmware onto GSM phone and recovering it back if something goes wrong. Has anybody tried that?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Best case scenario you just ODIN back to GSM firmware. Worst case, you brick your phone.
Don't try it. It won't work. Waste of time. Flashing different firmware to the phone isn't going to change the physical radios in the device. Just buy an i9250 and you'll get HSPA+.
Yeah just to make it clear in case there's any confusion, the nexus will absolutely not work with lte. Not possible at all, no way to flash anything etc. It is missing the hardware needed.

Samsung Galaxy Nexus Variants?

Hi friends, these days buy a samsung nexus I9250 galaxy, but I wanted something:
1. few versions of the galaxy samsung nexus there?
2. There is a version that supports GSM networks lte? which is?
3. i9250 model supports HSPA + 21?
4. i9250 model that handles frequencies in HSPA +?
There are 2 versions.
1) CDMA/LTE on Verizon Wireless USA only. Model i515
2) GSM/HSPA+ (21mbps radio). Pentaband (works on any GSM carrier). Model i9250
And that's it! There are no GSM/LTE models.
i9250t provided by Telstra an Australian service provider.
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using xda premium
zeekiz said:
i9250t provided by Telstra an Australian service provider.
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using xda premium
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
in what frecuency works the I9250t?
jamm513 said:
in what frecuency works the I9250t?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
As I noted in my post... they all support the same frequencies. Its pentaband GSM it'll work on any GSM network in the world.
For your reference so you can stop asking: http://www.phonearena.com/phones/Samsung-GALAXY-Nexus_id5595
I'm not sure, take expansys for example:
USA:
Network: HSPA+ 21Mbps/HSUPA 5.76Mbps 850/900/1900/1700/2100 / Quad-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE: 850/900/1800/1900 MHz / (Band frequency, HSPA availability, and data speed are operator dependent)
UK:
Network: HSPA/WCDMA Europe/Asia: 900/2100 MHz / HSPA+ 21Mbps/HSUPA 5.76Mbps / Quad-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE: 850/900/1800/1900 MHz / (Band frequency, HSPA availability, and data speed are operator dependent)
*Also, on Samsung web SAR page, there:
GT-I9250 GT-I9250J GT-I9250M GT-I9250T
from here:
http://www.samsung.com/sar/sarMain?site_cd=&prd_mdl_name=9250&selNatCd=US&languageCode=EN
So maybe there 4 different variant, also there a SC-04D for Japan,
SHW-M420S and M420K for Korea.
somebody have to check it , also the nexus S have plenty of variants, so I see nothing new here, but just go for standard GT-I9250 as it's pentaband 3G that will work in any country , BTW I dunno if GT-I9250* go with other build thank "yakju", not that it will do anything with the frequencies as it's software, but if you think of it, with other devices there mostly 2 main variants, 1 for Europe, and 1 for Americas, sometime also for China, and other regions. Anyone can get more info about it?
E15i said:
I'm not sure, take expansys for example:
USA:
Network: HSPA+ 21Mbps/HSUPA 5.76Mbps 850/900/1900/1700/2100 / Quad-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE: 850/900/1800/1900 MHz / (Band frequency, HSPA availability, and data speed are operator dependent)
UK:
Network: HSPA/WCDMA Europe/Asia: 900/2100 MHz / HSPA+ 21Mbps/HSUPA 5.76Mbps / Quad-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE: 850/900/1800/1900 MHz / (Band frequency, HSPA availability, and data speed are operator dependent)
*Also, on Samsung web SAR page, there:
GT-I9250 GT-I9250J GT-I9250M GT-I9250T
from here:
http://www.samsung.com/sar/sarMain?site_cd=&prd_mdl_name=9250&selNatCd=US&languageCode=EN
So maybe there 4 different variant, also there a SC-04D for Japan,
SHW-M420S and M420K for Korea.
somebody have to check it , also the nexus S have plenty of variants, so I see nothing new here, but just go for standard GT-I9250 as it's pentaband 3G that will work in any country , BTW I dunno if GT-I9250* go with other build thank "yakju", not that it will do anything with the frequencies as it's software, but if you think of it, with other devices there mostly 2 main variants, 1 for Europe, and 1 for Americas, sometime also for China, and other regions. Anyone can get more info about it?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It doesn't matter what variation it is, a GSM phone will work on GSM networks and a LTE phone on all LTE networks. (unlocked, of course)
GSM and LTE have completely different frequencies so a GSM phone will not work on LTE networks and vice versa.
PS. HSDPA+ has nothing to do with the phone itself but if the network you are on provides you with it.
E15i said:
I'm not sure, take expansys for example:
USA:
Network: HSPA+ 21Mbps/HSUPA 5.76Mbps 850/900/1900/1700/2100 / Quad-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE: 850/900/1800/1900 MHz / (Band frequency, HSPA availability, and data speed are operator dependent)
UK:
Network: HSPA/WCDMA Europe/Asia: 900/2100 MHz / HSPA+ 21Mbps/HSUPA 5.76Mbps / Quad-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE: 850/900/1800/1900 MHz / (Band frequency, HSPA availability, and data speed are operator dependent)
*Also, on Samsung web SAR page, there:
GT-I9250 GT-I9250J GT-I9250M GT-I9250T
from here:
http://www.samsung.com/sar/sarMain?site_cd=&prd_mdl_name=9250&selNatCd=US&languageCode=EN
So maybe there 4 different variant, also there a SC-04D for Japan,
SHW-M420S and M420K for Korea.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Its all just semantics and slightly different radio software. They are all the same. You can use ANY i9250 model on ANY GSM carrier in the world. Read my first post it gives you all the information you need in practicality.
The i9250 is regularly for sale from dozens of resellers. Just buy one ffs.
What did you mean by Its all just semantics and slightly different radio software?
you mean it's possible to disable some of the frequencies with flashing different radio? from what I learned here, software have nothing to do with the frequencies that device supports, only hardware (antennas) matters here. also the other variants, are made for specific operators, so a normal i9520 wins, as you not depend on Samsung or the operator for OTA updates, also I'm not sure if let say J variant get OTA with "yakju".
E15i said:
What did you mean by Its all just semantics and slightly different radio software?
you mean it's possible to disable some of the frequencies with flashing different radio? from what I learned here, software have nothing to do with the frequencies that device supports, only hardware (antennas) matters here. also the other variants, are made for specific operators, so a normal i9520 wins, as you not depend on Samsung or the operator for OTA updates, also I'm not sure if let say J variant get OTA with "yakju".
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Not hardware radio, software radio. The different variants (yakju** models) have slightly different radio software for the regions they're originally sold in. All i9250 models support the same GSM frequencies.
These models aren't necessarily made for specific carriers but specific regions. Any i9250 can be flashed to yakju with images from Google if you prefer. You will receive OTAs either way, but may receive them slightly faster if you choose to flash to yakju.
Long story short, you shouldn't care. Just buy the cheapest one you can get, because if it doesn't come with yakju out of the box, it takes about ~5minutes to flash it to yakju and be the exact same (and no this doesn't require root or anything, you just unlock your bootloader and flash images, then it is completely stock).
So just to drive it home again: ANY i9250 you buy will work on ANY carrier in the world. The hardware is the same, and the software may be slightly different, but 100% changeable to your liking. Just buy the phone.
Ok, and I guess, lock the bootloader after?
I also buy it soon, and I also want to use "yakju" build, but dont want to root or unlock bootloader, but there is no way to flash "yakju" without unlock the bootloader?
*sigh*
Jesus christ what happened to the experimental Nexus spirit?
Why on earth even get this phone if you are afraid of touching it?
It's a phone designed to be ****ed with and still be bootable with code hosted outside it if you **** it up completely. It's virtually impossible to break.
How on earth can you even consider buying this phone if your main intention is not using what is what made for?
If you don't want all that, just get a regular phone, made for regular people, where you get your updates, regularly, through some really ****ty 3rd party "value-addon" software. Which only runs on 2 versions of Windows. And slowly.
Or just get your yakju/non-yakju phone and get the updates when you do, which will still be before everyone else.
Really.
You are putting to much into this. Either you want a moddable phone, and this one is it, or you are not a modder, and you should get something else.
josteink said:
*sigh*
Jesus christ what happened to the experimental Nexus spirit?
Why on earth even get this phone if you are afraid of touching it?
It's a phone designed to be ****ed with and still be bootable with code hosted outside it if you **** it up completely. It's virtually impossible to break.
How on earth can you even consider buying this phone if your main intention is not using what is what made for?
If you don't want all that, just get a regular phone, made for regular people, where you get your updates, regularly, through some really ****ty 3rd party "value-addon" software. Which only runs on 2 versions of Windows. And slowly.
Or just get your yakju/non-yakju phone and get the updates when you do, which will still be before everyone else.
Really.
You are putting to much into this. Either you want a moddable phone, and this one is it, or you are not a modder, and you should get something else.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That's quite a pompous rant. Shame you're so embarrassingly off the mark. The Nexus is a dev phone, because it is important to have a smoothly running device with the latest operating system out there for manufacturers and app developers. It contributes to the viability of the Android ecosystem (#1 reason the Nexus is made for). Hence the rapid OTA system on an incremental version basis. But you're full blown ego-crazy if you think Google released a phone just for you - the 0.001% that wants to mod. This is a mass market phone now (#2 reason it is made for). Most consumers buy it exactly so they don't have to root and install custom roms to stay up to date without the inherent bleeding-edge bugs that goes along with hacking. All Android phones are moddable. Why the hell wouldn't you have bought something with better specs if you were just going to mod it? You did it wrong. Sorry to break it to you, but Google made the GN without your specific hobby in mind.
E15i said:
Ok, and I guess, lock the bootloader after?
I also buy it soon, and I also want to use "yakju" build, but dont want to root or unlock bootloader, but there is no way to flash "yakju" without unlock the bootloader?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You don't root. You do unlock the bootloader, but who cares! If you must have a locked bootloader, its just 1 extra command line entry to lock it again after you're done flashing to yakju.
Don't think you're understanding really. Unlocking the bootloader on a Nexus is not a big deal. It is literally 1 command line entry to unlock or lock. Like I said, flashing yakju takes literally 5 minutes.
I know that, but people here talking about the variants of it,
how can we be 100% sure, that for example M and J have the same hardware?
and only the radio software is different?!
E15i said:
I know that, but people here talking about the variants of it,
how can we be 100% sure, that for example M and J have the same hardware?
and only the radio software is different?!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You just know! Stop worrying FFS. I could hand you either one with flashed yakju firmware and you would never be able to tell the difference (even with regional software you wouldn't tell). No matter what, you'll get an i9250 that's what matters.
Hi im a passive reader i never register... but now i want to buy this phone and I cant find the answer..
I want to buy this product
amazon.de/Samsung-Smartphone-Touchscreen-Megapixel-titanium-silber/dp/B005Y5SE6I/ref=dp_return_1?ie=UTF8&n=562066&s=ce-de
But i dont know if this model: GT-I9250TSADBT is pentaband or not...
My 3G network is 850/1900
Ty for the answer and sorry for my noob question
Mapeed said:
Hi im a passive reader i never register... but now i want to buy this phone and I cant find the answer..
I want to buy this product
amazon.de/Samsung-Smartphone-Touchscreen-Megapixel-titanium-silber/dp/B005Y5SE6I/ref=dp_return_1?ie=UTF8&n=562066&s=ce-de
But i dont know if this model: GT-I9250TSADBT is pentaband or not...
My 3G network is 850/1900
Ty for the answer and sorry for my noob question
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
All GSM Galaxy Nexus devices are pentaband.
Mapeed said:
Hi im a passive reader i never register... but now i want to buy this phone and I cant find the answer..
I want to buy this product
amazon.de/Samsung-Smartphone-Touchscreen-Megapixel-titanium-silber/dp/B005Y5SE6I/ref=dp_return_1?ie=UTF8&n=562066&s=ce-de
But i dont know if this model: GT-I9250TSADBT is pentaband or not...
My 3G network is 850/1900
Ty for the answer and sorry for my noob question
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Create a thread. No need to bump a thread from 3 months ago to ask an unrelated question.
Sent from the future.
SocialReject said:
Create a thread. No need to bump a thread from 3 months ago to ask an unrelated question.
Sent from the future.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If i do that u will tell me then that i have to use the search tool...
Ty for the answer

[Q] Question: Galaxy S Tab 10.5 Wifi LTE USA/International

Here may be another stupid question, But Not even Samsung them selfs on the USA Department couldnt answer this, So let me explain a few things before I ask, so that you may understand what I may be talking about..
I have 2 Samsung galaxy S Tab's 10.5
One is 32gb Wifi Bought from Best Buy (T800)
The other is 16gb Wifi LTE International (T805) Unlocked.
From what I understand the International version will not support 4G on T-Mobile or most any carrier in USA do to the supported Signal.
What I want to know is, Whats the diffrents between the International and the Local USA version when it comes to the LTE. I cant find anything that tells me what I want to know.
From what I can see, is the signals ranges are the same as the USA version. but maybe I am reading it wrong,
When I check out the hardware with diffrent apps that support that. it pretty much shows the two being the same except for a few things that dont seem to matter.
So to make a long story short,, I just want to know what the diffrents is between the LTE Local USA and the LTE International version.
Eliminater74 said:
Here may be another stupid question, But Not even Samsung them selfs on the USA Department couldnt answer this, So let me explain a few things before I ask, so that you may understand what I may be talking about..
I have 2 Samsung galaxy S Tab's 10.5
One is 32gb Wifi Bought from Best Buy (T800)
The other is 16gb Wifi LTE International (T805) Unlocked.
From what I understand the International version will not support 4G on T-Mobile or most any carrier in USA do to the supported Signal.
What I want to know is, Whats the diffrents between the International and the Local USA version when it comes to the LTE. I cant find anything that tells me what I want to know.
From what I can see, is the signals ranges are the same as the USA version. but maybe I am reading it wrong,
When I check out the hardware with diffrent apps that support that. it pretty much shows the two being the same except for a few things that dont seem to matter.
So to make a long story short,, I just want to know what the diffrents is between the LTE Local USA and the LTE International version.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
1. I believe the USA specific versions are voice crippled so you cannot make voice calls.
2. According to here
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T-Mobile_US#Radio_frequency_spectrum_chart
The frequencies supported by T-Mob USA for LTE are....
1700/2100 MHz LTE 4G In Service/Building out Covers 250 million POPs as of October, 2014
700 MHz Block A LTE 4G A-block rollout has begun, and several devices already support this frequency.
1900 MHz PCS LTE 4G In Service/Building out Primarily used for a quick rollout of rural LTE as sites contain a pre-existing GSM antenna
3. According to here
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung_Galaxy_Tab_S_10.5
The frequencies supported by the International 10.5 Tab S are
800/850/900/1800/2100/2600
As you can see the only 'common' frequency is the 2100 Mhz set which 'should' cover the bulk of Urban USA however there may be specific signalling that T-Mob require to allow devices to access that frequency.
Hope this helps
If you have LTE version you be able to call through google hangouts dialer. I do it on n7 LTE. And the app.
Sent from my Nexus 7 using XDA Free mobile app
pinsb said:
1. I believe the USA specific versions are voice crippled so you cannot make voice calls.
2. According to here
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T-Mobile_US#Radio_frequency_spectrum_chart
The frequencies supported by T-Mob USA for LTE are....
1700/2100 MHz LTE 4G In Service/Building out Covers 250 million POPs as of October, 2014
700 MHz Block A LTE 4G A-block rollout has begun, and several devices already support this frequency.
1900 MHz PCS LTE 4G In Service/Building out Primarily used for a quick rollout of rural LTE as sites contain a pre-existing GSM antenna
3. According to here
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung_Galaxy_Tab_S_10.5
The frequencies supported by the International 10.5 Tab S are
800/850/900/1800/2100/2600
As you can see the only 'common' frequency is the 2100 Mhz set which 'should' cover the bulk of Urban USA however there may be specific signalling that T-Mob require to allow devices to access that frequency.
Hope this helps
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I want to thank you very much. I really did search around to try and understand. but when it comes to the carrier LTE stuff, I no nothing about it.
Yea T-Mobile told me the only plan they have for tablets are Data and no voice. that really sucks. I dont understand that one. I have an
LG G3 that has T-Mobile. I can use the hotspot on that if needed.. the chances that im going to leave my house with this Tablet are very slim. so I can just stay with the wifi.
Duffmantp said:
If you have LTE version you be able to call through google hangouts dialer. I do it on n7 LTE. And the app.
Sent from my Nexus 7 using XDA Free mobile app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yea I just tried that.. It worked.. prob cheaper then T-Mobles plans

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