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ka79535
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Re: Tmobile Home Internet with Tmobile Cellspot
I am also having the same issue. The worst part is that almost 3 years ago when I set up the personal cellspot, I was told it would be a temp fix as they were upgrading the towers near me (2 miles). Well, it appears they did not upgrade the tower. Side note….the T-mobile map that shows an area as 5G extended…..taker it with a grain of salt. I found out from one of the reps at T-mobile that I have been working with to get this resolved that the 5G signal….and even the 4G LTE signal is only strong enough for an outdoor connection. T-mobile knows the signals are too weak to use indoors…..but they do not explain that. They just want to be able to show a pretty colored map. As of now, T-mobile has still not provided a viable work-around to the issue. I have contacted both the cell phone and home internet division. Get the usual..."We are always upgrading towers to give users the best possible experience"line. T-mobile has no clue how to handle the issues they have…..seems like there were some huge holes in their beta testing.2Visto0likes0ComentariosCannot get a secondary signal
I have had home internet through T-mobile for a little over 3 weeks and I cannot get a secondary signal. I have tried changing the gateway location and tried using an external antenna. The t-mobile map shows my area as covered by 5g extended. No such luck. The signal I am getting is pretty weak. All T-mobile can tell me is they are constantly upgrading towers in order to provide the best customer experience…..4KViews1like11ComentariosRe: Poor Internet speed and not reliabity
Timsw wrote: roninaz wrote: I have had home internet for 30+ days. The speed and reliability hasnot been consistent. I have seen speed from 80 ~ 100 mbs and then have seen speed from 1 ~ 5 mbs. Also while streaming Netflix and Prime we have seen buffering and sometimes the movie locks up and I have to restart the movie. My Sonos One device keep disconnecting due to slow internet speed (speed test was less than 1 mbs). The disparity between getting a connection speed of 80 to 100 at times and 1 to 5 at others is probably too great to be congestion/traffic. It's possible when you are stuck on the slow speed (which often means frequent internet disconnection) it could be that you are connecting to 4G only, instead of the 4G/5G non-standalone signal pair that constitutes 5G, with the 5G signal being an n71 or an n41, depending on what is on your tower. The essential thing to try is finding a gateway placement in your house that helps you connect at the fastest speed range possible. If you don't know where your tower is, that's okay, but then try placing the gateway in various windows, or as high as you can, like in the attic, and include various rotation angles. Each time a position change is made with the gateway you restart the gateway via the button on the side, wait two minutes for it to reconnect automatically and do a speed test. You're looking for a location/position of the gateway that will maintain the highest speed range, which usually, but not always, goes along with the highest number of bars of signal strength available in your house. What I mean by rotation angle is the gateway can be rotated in place, and because it has 4 little antennas inside, their orientation can make a significant difference in what signal bands you are connecting to. That can make a speed difference. The nature of this beast called 5G cellular is a neighbor three houses away up a hill near you may get a great connection while your geographic position and elevation, just behind a hill between you and the tower, means your connection is bad. I live in a rural area 5 miles from the tower, and get an average of 150 download, often over 200, whereas on DSL I was in the single digit speeds, with a 1 for an upload, and paying $45 for that. I understand what it would be like for you, hoping for the 100 that "most customers," or "some customers" get, or however it is worded in their ads. Besides distance to tower and number of obstructions, other factors can come into play in how good the reception is at your particular house. Even if 30% of their customers are a fail, it just doesn't work well at all for them, turn back their equipment, T mobile will still be raking in huge profits.I stuck with stupid CenturyLink for 12 years,having to call them every year or so to negotiate a more reasonable price for the slow connection I was getting, and so Tmobile's flat $50 forever price, and the way I've already had one significant speed boost in the last three months, it has been unbelievable, almost. I'm just a customer, and It's not that I mind people airing their frustrations against Tmobile -- this is probably as good a place as any to air your frustrations -- but I think sometimes people are causing themselves excess frustration by demanding to communicate directly with the CEO -- not that you did that -- or thinking a massive corporation actually cares about the plight of individual customers and their internet problems. Tmobile often has the highest customer satisfaction among cellular providers. In fact, I kind of sympathize with your particular problem, of getting good speed sometimes, and then it just being horrible at other times. Therefore, I posted this and hope something I suggested helps you. In some ways, T-mobile is their own worst enemy. I have been with them for phone service for years. When I called in about Home Internet availability (after looking on the map and seeing my area was all 5g extended) I was told I could expect at least 25mbps…...so I ordered the package. I get nowhere near that and, like others, get the "our engineers are working on it" answer from support. They are all pleasant and thorough, but there is nothing they can really do, and it isn't their fault. Maybe T-mobile should adjust their maps to reflect reality and maybe consider setting a lower expectation for customers….especially in rural areas. I am 2 miles from the tower and cannot get a 5g signal on the router. ...plus, I only get 2 bars. I had one of the T-mobile personal cell spots hooked up to my Frontier Router because the signal was weak here. I thought maybe they had corrected the issue so I took the chance. Perhaps I should have known better, but I do think T-mobile is being overly optimistic with their promotion of this home internet solution. It is likely much more stable in urban areas.1Ver1like0ComentariosRe: Home internet not the option for rural areas that was hoped for.
I checked the coverage map but did not find a tower map. As for primary vs secondary ….. I am not even getting a secondary signal. I have been with T-mobile for years and have never had issues. I had doubts that this option would work, but was assured by the support person that it would. As for promises of a certain speed, I know those promises are nothing, but a support person should not say that to a customer when troubleshooting. When I first got the receiver, it had not been registered properly, so I had to get tech support to help. Once connected, the support person had me check a couple of things to verify it was working. One of those things was the speed test. I only got 11mbps on that and she said that was because the system was "provisioning" and that could take 24 hours, but "rest assured you will be able to get a minimum of 20 down once that is done." I am not upset with T-mobile. but this is a caution to anyone considering this as an option to guard your expectations. Obviously, T-mobile wants to sell you their service and can claim all sorts of things…...but in a rural area with no clear line of sight to a tower, I suspect others will find they are having the same issues as I am experiencing6Visto0likes0ComentariosHome internet not the option for rural areas that was hoped for.
I live in a rural area an while I am pretty close to a T-Mobile tower, there are lots of trees. I just received the T-mobile home internet receiver and, so farafter 3 days, I can tell this is not going to work. My internet is currently through Frontier and I get about 16 up and 1 down. T-mobile had promised me I would get 20minimum down. Well, it is morelike an average of about 10 to 11 mbps down. I have hit mbps twice during constant speed tests. Sadly, this just is not living up to promises or expectations. It likely works fine in an urban setting, but the signals are just too weak in rural settings, or at least the one I am in. T-mobile is very loose with there definition of areas where this can function as described.1.9KViews0likes9Comentarios