Actually, TMo reception is better on the Max than my Qualcomm 7+ and my area doesn’t have 600 MHz (71) band. Per cellmapper there is no band 71 in SoCal.I advise anyone on T-Mobile to avoid the xs max. It’s reception is poor.
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Actually, TMo reception is better on the Max than my Qualcomm 7+ and my area doesn’t have 600 MHz (71) band. Per cellmapper there is no band 71 in SoCal.I advise anyone on T-Mobile to avoid the xs max. It’s reception is poor.
I advise anyone on T-Mobile to avoid the xs max. It’s reception is poor.
You can go to cellmapper.net and check nearby cell towers for tmob to see if they have band 71 enabled.Using http://maps.t-mobile.com/ the coverage map at my office location doesn’t change whether or not I enabled the “view with extended range LTE” toggle. In both cases it’s listed as “Good” coverage only and the pop up on the pin says the below
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They definitely do not have band 71 enabled anywhere near me. Very interesting stuff.You can go to cellmapper.net and check nearby cell towers for tmob to see if they have band 71 enabled.
Apple is more concerned with emojis and pretty camera photos, than connectivity.
Honestly right now it's a crapshoot. Some will have issues, some will not. Just because it the new iPhones didn't work for me because of reception issues doesn't mean they won't work for someone else in a different area even on the same network. And maybe someone in my area with a different network than won't have reception issues. Who knows until Apple pushes an update to see what's really going on, but until then there is no reason to get upset with others because the phone works for them. One factor in my wanting to leave Android was the fracturing of the community. The hate and vicious attacks on those that didn't like the phone you had or vice versa. Or the loss of community in the ROM community.
Well, as you know I've posted that my Xs Max is performing well in AT&T fringe areas, and faster than my 2017 Qualcomm iPhone X when in weak signal areas and strong ones. And, it switches between LTE, 4G and 3G seamlessly so I have not lost a call yet.
So, today I was in Breckenridge Colorado, and drove the back way through the mountains from Colorado Springs with fairly weak signal in most places on the way there and back.
I had my 2017 Qualcomm iPhone X connected to CarPlay, and also my iPhone Xs Max on the dash vent as a spare mapping device, while using the Pioneer W8400 built-in Map app (since maps are stored on the device and it doesn't need cell to load maps).
Many times I had 1 bar LTE on the Xs Max when the X had no signal (or 2-4 bars 4G when LTE signal would get lost or weak), and I could use the Xs for Siri to send dictated texts or load street maps the entire drive, meanwhile my 2017 iPhone X could not connect to Siri or load any map data in those same places.
So far, if I had not read the messages on this forum, I'd have no idea that the iPhone Xs Max has cellular connection issues. My Xs Max would give me 54.2 mbps down/16.3 mbps down in the center of Breckenridge, while my iPhone X was at 33.1/18.7 mbps.
More importantly, how was Breckinridge? I remember the wonderful smell of burgers and dogs being grilled below my lift chair: I had to race back down for a burger. I love that place!![]()
Not necessarily. It depends on the actual voltage received. As mentioned it won’t affect users in a strong (cell) signal area. The input stage of radio receivers have the job of presenting a constant level signal to the following stage. To simplify, when you take your phones from a high signal area into an area of low signal at one point one radio would start reading lower than the other until the signal becomes so weak the second phone also can’t receive it usefully and they both read no signal even though there is some in the air. It’s just below both receivers thresholds, and will read zero as the signal gets weaker as you get farther from the cell transmitter. The inverse, going into a higher signal area is the same. It is a little more complex since signal strength measurements are non-linear and the phones calibrations aren’t precision and different models may be calibrated differently. It was demonstrated with the iPhone 4 they can adjust the signal indications to read anything they want in these devices. No reference level measurements are provided.Wouldnt this cause a different rx signal strength reading between my XS Max and wife's Iphone 7 Plus then? They are reading identical signal strengths....
It could very well be that your Note is locking on to a stronger band, while for some reason the iPhone is locking on to a weaker instead. Each tower has multiple bands, ones that are stronger than the other ones on the same tower. If for some reason the phone is prioritizing the weaker band over the stronger band, that can be fixed with FW. So you really can't compare the amount of bars on one phone to another phone and say the one with the more amount of bars has a better modem or antenna. Too many variables to know for sure. But if the iPhone is indeed being directed by the FW, or even the carrier to prioritize the weaker band, we should be either getting a carrier or iOS update soon. My guess since it's happening on multiple carriers, it will have to come from Apple. It reminds me of old DOS computer language and the misuse of "if" in the string of commands. If/Or in the wrong order could create a mess.This is becoming a make it or break it for me. I have a Note 8 getting full bars with and the iPhone XS is only getting me 2 bars. Not sure what the problem is.
It’s a wait another year to upgrade if I return or wait 2 if I don’t lol.I doubt they will really change the antennas hardware wise. They never did it on the iPhone 4 that had severe issues back then... They will "fix" it via software, optimize as much as they can and that's it.
Real hardware changes won't happen until next year's iPhone.
just my two €-cents![]()
We had street taco's at CB and Potts, and then went to Crepes ala cart for desert. Weather was fantastic, 70 degrees and sunny! The dogs had fun at the dog park as well.
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Did they not change the iPhone 6 casing after bend gate - this for the later versions of iPhone 6 itself ?I doubt they will really change the antennas hardware wise. They never did it on the iPhone 4 that had severe issues back then... They will "fix" it via software, optimize as much as they can and that's it.
Real hardware changes won't happen until next year's iPhone.
just my two €-cents![]()
From the map is not really clear when 600 Mhz is enabled, it doesn't change to me at zip 55446, where can I find accurate information is 600 Mhz is enabled? ThanksUsing http://maps.t-mobile.com/ the coverage map at my office location doesn’t change whether or not I enabled the “view with extended range LTE” toggle. In both cases it’s listed as “Good” coverage only and the pop up on the pin says the below
View attachment 790948