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Tri-band

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Tri-band phones (also known as triband) are mobile phones that support three frequency bands. Having more than one frequency in one device is useful to enable roaming between different countries and continents. Tri-band technology is slowly becoming the norm among many manufacturers.

Contents

[edit] 2G

Various countries use different frequency bands for their mobile networks and a tri-band phone can be used on three of these bands, generally speaking, chosen to favour two of the home country's bands, and one for roaming in other countries.

GSM frequency bands used around the world:

  • 850 MHz (In the USA and Canada)
  • 900 MHz (In Africa, Europe, and many parts of Asia and Latin America)
  • 1800 MHz (In Africa, Europe, and Asia and many parts of Latin America)
  • 1900 MHz (In the USA and Canada)

2G Tri-band phones are mobile phones that support the GSM 900/1800/1900 MHz bands commonly sold in Europe, Asia and Africa, (for example the LG KE820 is a triband mobile phone that is sold in Europe, but works in big cities of America but not so well in suburbs and rural areas[citation needed]). Alternatively the 850/1800/1900 bands (commonly sold in the Americas). The Motorola V300 formerly carried by Rogers Wireless used a rare combination of 850/900/1900. A 2G Quad band (850/900/1800/1900) offers more coverage and is now quite common.

[edit] 3G

UMTS / HSDPA devices operate in UMTS frequency bands 850/1900/2100 or 850/1700/2100 MHz:

  • 2100 (downlink) / 1900 (uplink) for Europe and Asia (usually referred simply as W-CDMA 2100)
  • 1900 / 850 (independently, for both the uplink and downlink) for America (e.g. AT&T)
  • 2100 (downlink) / 1700 (uplink) for America (e.g. T-Mobile)
  • 850 for Australia (Telstra NextG)

UMTS / HSDPA / HSUPA is a further evolution.

Note that being UMTS / HSDPA / HSUPA tri-band doesn't mean that phone is a GSM / GPRS / EDGE tri-band. An HSUPA tri band might not be a GSM at all. However nearly all HSDPA or HSUPA tri band are EDGE quad band too.

A 3G Quad band offers more coverage.

[edit] Devices

Some UMTS / HSDPA 850/1900/2100 tri band are already available:

Some UMTS / HSDPA / HSUPA 850/1900/2100 tri band are already available:

[edit] See also

[edit] External links


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