Home  ›  Carriers  ›

Verizon

Info & Phones News Forum  

all discussions

show all 6 replies

Poor 3G coverage, better 4G?

andy2373

Jun 5, 2012, 10:14 PM
If I've got a 3G phone that has poor coverage in a certain area. And I change to a 4G phone, and the same area is covered by 4G would I get better signal?
...
Jarahawk

Jun 6, 2012, 7:33 PM
*Raised eyebrow*
...
CellStudent

Jun 7, 2012, 6:39 PM
Verizon's LTE operates in the 700 MHz band. The LTE radio waves can travel farther distances and penetrate walls better than the 1900 MHz 3G radio waves.

You will almost certainly get better data service, but it won't help with voice coverage in the short term because (right now) voice traffic passes over the 2G network, which is 850 MHz.

Verizon stated many months ago that they plan to move voice traffic to the LTE network as quickly as they can, and I suspect that will be months away rather than years away. I haven't checked specific models lately, but not all current LTE phones will be capable of using the voice-over-LTE network once the switch is flipped. Do your homework and choose one that will work on the new standard.
...
Jayshmay

Jun 7, 2012, 9:55 PM
How would someone even know (Othan than the LG Revolution) which ones are VoLTE capable?
...
andy2373

Jun 10, 2012, 5:28 PM
I'm asking because at work my iPhone 4S waffles between 3G and 1xRTT. And in certain areas all I'll get is 1xRTT.
So I'm wondering if it's just a poor coverage area period for Verizon? Or if I upgrade to a 4G device I'll get a more consistent data coverage? ๐Ÿคจ
...
CellStudent

Jun 10, 2012, 11:58 PM
andy2373 said:
I'm asking because at work my iPhone 4S waffles between 3G and 1xRTT. And in certain areas all I'll get is 1xRTT.
So I'm wondering if it's just a poor coverage area period for Verizon? Or if I upgrade to a 4G device I'll get a more consistent data coverage? ๐Ÿคจ



Ideally, you could find someone who owns an LTE handset and ask them if service works in the areas you care about.

If that's not an option, it is safe to assume that anywhere that actually has deployed, active, company-advertised LTE will have LTE signals that are stronger and more reliable than the 1xRTT signals. HOW MUCH more reliable is an open question. It might only be a trivial improvement if we're talking about an out...
(continues)
...
andy2373

Jun 15, 2012, 4:03 AM
Well, maybe not. I just drug a friend with a 4G phone down to my iPhone 4S's deadzone.
And guess what, his dropped to 3G. Which as mine was, his to was unusable.

So I surmise a Verizon dead zone is a dead zone for all, 3G, 4G.

Although the 4G frequencies should penetrate buildings better. Verizon just hasn't upgraded or taken care of some dead zones.

Sadly these areas used to be AT&T dead zones as well. But they seem to have actually made good on promises, even without the TMO merger. ๐Ÿ˜•
...

You must log in to reply.

Please log in to report a message to the moderator.


all discussions

Subscribe to Phone Scoop News with RSS Follow @phonescoop on Threads Follow @phonescoop on Mastodon Phone Scoop on Facebook Follow on Instagram

 

Playwire

All content Copyright 2001-2024 Phone Factor, LLC. All Rights Reserved.
Content on this site may not be copied or republished without formal permission.