Bold 9900 or 9930 to go between USA and Canada?
- I am looking to upgrade to the Bold 9900/9930, having had my old Bold 9000 for a while now. I live in Canada, but will be attending school in the US this fall. My plan is to switch between my Rogers SIM card and an American SIM card (Verizon is supposed to be strongest in my area, followed by AT&T). A couple questions:
1) Is this possible to do?
2) Should I get the 9900 (with Rogers in Canada) or the 9930 (with Verizon in the US)? Or would either work in this case? I understand that the 9900 uses a SIM card, but I'm not sure that the 9930 does.
3) Is there a better option for traveling constantly between the US and Canada? (What exactly is Verizon's Nationwide Plus Canada plan?)
Any help is appreciated. Thank you very much.08-17-11 05:48 PMLike 0 - Double-check me, but don't AT&T and Rogers use the same 3G bands? You'd unfortunately need to wait until freaking November to get an AT&T 9900, but you could get a Rogers one and if unlocked I think you'd have full AT&T access in the US.
Maybe I'm confused and thinking about Bell and Telus. I live in the US, not Canada, so my understanding of Canadian carriers is limited to phones I've considered importing until I saw the price.
Posted from my CrackBerry at wapforums.crackberry.com08-17-11 07:36 PMLike 0 - You could get a 9900, unlock it, and then get a T-Mobile SIM card.
AT&T PayGo only works in the US, so you'll lose out on any calls if you're out of border range.
T-Mobile works in Canada. I have Tmo as my roaming SIM card. I just inserted into my unlocked 9900 and it works
Or, you could just not bother and get a US travelling pack that is offered by Rogers.08-17-11 07:55 PMLike 0 - Double-check me, but don't AT&T and Rogers use the same 3G bands? You'd unfortunately need to wait until freaking November to get an AT&T 9900, but you could get a Rogers one and if unlocked I think you'd have full AT&T access in the US.
Maybe I'm confused and thinking about Bell and Telus. I live in the US, not Canada, so my understanding of Canadian carriers is limited to phones I've considered importing until I saw the price.
Posted from my CrackBerry at wapforums.crackberry.com
They are the same 3G band as AT&T
Tmobile & Wind canada are the ones that use different 3G bands
So rogers & at&t phones will work together on 3G, but they will only get 2g/edge with tmobile08-17-11 09:06 PMLike 0 - @ The_Kills:
So, just to clarify, a 9930 from Verizon would be fast in the US, but slower in Canada when used with a Rogers SIM card?
@ chrono807:
If I were to get a Rogers 9900 and unlock it, would there be a difference in how well a Verizon vs AT&T SIM card worked in the US? I have heard that Verizon is stronger where I will be so I would prefer that if they are theoretically equal.
I am leaning towards doing that. There is a Nationwide Plus Canada plan offered by Verizon however... I want to make sure that isn't the obvious choice. From what I understand, it only covers long-distance calls, so I would still pay extra for texting over the border and roaming when in Canada. Can anyone confirm or explain this plan to me?
Thanks again guys08-17-11 09:32 PMLike 0 - Ultimately, if you want the most flexibility from your device, get the 9900. You can unlock it, and freely swap SIMs between US and Canadian carriers all the while maintaining HSPA+ speeds.
If you get a 9930, you'll get CDMA 3G speeds in the US, but will have to roam when you're back here in Canada on either Bell or Telus' EVDO network to get the same speeds. If you unlock the 9930, and put in a Rogers SIM, you'll only have access to the quad band EDGE network, and not the HSPA+ network due to the hardware not supporting the North American HSPA bands.08-17-11 09:39 PMLike 0 - @ The_Kills:
So, just to clarify, a 9930 from Verizon would be fast in the US, but slower in Canada when used with a Rogers SIM card?
@ chrono807:
If I were to get a Rogers 9900 and unlock it, would there be a difference in how well a Verizon vs AT&T SIM card worked in the US? I have heard that Verizon is stronger where I will be so I would prefer that if they are theoretically equal.
I am leaning towards doing that. There is a Nationwide Plus Canada plan offered by Verizon however... I want to make sure that isn't the obvious choice. From what I understand, it only covers long-distance calls, so I would still pay extra for texting over the border and roaming when in Canada. Can anyone confirm or explain this plan to me?
Thanks again guys
Posted from my CrackBerry at wapforums.crackberry.com08-18-11 06:50 AMLike 0 - In terms of coverage CDMA is has slightly more coverage by few percentage in Canada as of today. For general population I suggest going on the HSPA for the speed.
You also have to consider how HSPA coverage is like while you are in the US. I found myself benefiting more with CDMA coverage when I travel south of the border. In Canada I find very little difference between CDMA and HSPA coverage.08-20-11 11:08 PMLike 0 - Yup, I found that when I was down in the States and had a CDMA 9630 roaming on Verizon, the coverage was noticeably better than now, when I'm roaming on AT&T.08-21-11 01:13 AMLike 0
- I just wanted throw in my two cents, I unlocked my 9900 and used my AT&T Sim card that I bought for my 9800. I didn't need to do anything fancy when I re-booted the phone with the American SIM card a boz came up right away asking for the unlock code and boom it works.12-07-11 07:48 PMLike 0
- There isn't a tmobile canada existing. Likely they're lying, or they've gotten windmobile or mobilicity mixed up/confused. I would rather you buy the device from the carrier you want to use it on instead. It could possibly be stolen. Be careful.02-16-12 06:12 PMLike 0
- Bold 9930 is a true world phone; it's a dual-band EVDO Rev A (800/1900 MHz), quad-band EDGE (850/900/1800/1900 MHz), and dual-band HSDPA (900/2100 MHz) device, meaning it can hit 3G data speeds both here and overseas with the right data plan. You also get 802.11b/g/n Wi-Fi at 2.4GHz, and a/n Wi-Fi at 5GHz, which should fit perfectly into just about any existing corporate Wi-Fi network.02-16-12 06:23 PMLike 0
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Buyer beware.02-16-12 06:35 PMLike 0 - You could get a 9900, unlock it, and then get a T-Mobile SIM card.
AT&T PayGo only works in the US, so you'll lose out on any calls if you're out of border range.
T-Mobile works in Canada. I have Tmo as my roaming SIM card. I just inserted into my unlocked 9900 and it works
Or, you could just not bother and get a US travelling pack that is offered by Rogers.
Go with a Rogers 9900 unlocked, which you can do for free on the web, then add your ATT sim card for H+/4G both in the US and Canada. I own a T-Mobile 9900 and a Bell 9900...because the two are NOT interchangable for 4G/H+ speeds.02-16-12 06:42 PMLike 0 - I'm not worried at all, I'm buying from a guy on another forum and he has 4 feedback from other members on that forum. He's sent me pic's of the actual phone, I'm paying through paypal and he's worried more about me somehow scamming him. I would upload the pics of the phone but don't want to hi-jack the thread. The phone is in a Tmobile Box and I can see the imei in the pic.02-16-12 06:42 PMLike 0
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Bold 9900 or 9930 to go between USA and Canada?
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