Bands on Dual Sim SM-G988B/DS - Using in US - Samsung Galaxy S20 / S20+ / S20 Ultra Questions &

See:
https://www.ebay.com/itm/Samsung-Ga...hash=item2f3e25929d:m:m-RbzDQrZ-nfGw9V9LUYGlg
Its MSRP. They show band 30 (which is critical for AT&T) and 5G bands, for a dual sim device.
Anyone know if this is accurate?

G988B is Exynos device and that doesn't support well bands and carrier aggregation combinations used in US.

ekerbuddyeker said:
See:
https://www.ebay.com/itm/Samsung-Ga...hash=item2f3e25929d:m:m-RbzDQrZ-nfGw9V9LUYGlg
Its MSRP. They show band 30 (which is critical for AT&T) and 5G bands, for a dual sim device.
Anyone know if this is accurate?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
According to FrequencyCheck Band 30 is not supported. I've purchased a number of devices from MSRP, their device specs aren't always accurate.
https://www.frequencycheck.com/mode...-td-lte-128gb-samsung-hubble-2-5g#frequencies

Related

LTE bands of SM-930FD dual sim of Dubai

Hi guys. Can anyone let me know, what LTE bands of SM-930FD dual sim of Dubai support? Does it have band 40?
According to this site, yes it does work with band 40. It also lists all other bands the phone uses as well.
https://www.frequencycheck.com/models/A34rB/samsung-sm-n930fd-galaxy-note-7-duos-td-lte
Is there a way to check bands on the actual device? If so, I can check for you.

US Radio/Modem to enbale US 5G bands on G988N/G9880?

I want to get an asian variant of the s20 ultra so I can unlock my bootloader but those varients don't support the bands for T-Mobile 5G. Would it be possible to somehow enable the T-Mobile US bands on that variant?
600 MHz is low band and i think this device antenna or other RF-elements doesn't support such low band. 5G is too new also and you have to also somehow define en-dc combinations so i don't recommend buy this variant. If you like make sure 5G works, buy device from home market.

Unlock additional DR (5G) bands?

Hi all,
I'm wondering whether it is possible in some way to unlock additional NR bands on the S20. As far as I understand the Snapdragon 865 chipset, it comes as a fully-fledged 5G mobile platform which can be used in all countries and which supports all possible NR frequencies/bands.
So, it seems to me, that Samsung just locks off the majority of bands in the different models (for example, I got the G9810 and like to use it overall in Europe. However, Samsung only delivers the bands N1 and N78 but not e.g. N28).
Would be great if anybody could give me a hint about this.
Best
protonic_1
I think there is no way to add more bands because these are defined to hardware. But i'm very interested about your model 4G Carrier Aggregation Combinations. These can get from log file: https://mt-tech.fi/en/how-to-get-4g...ons-from-your-android-phone/#Qualcomm_devices . Could you please share to me this BandInfo file? You can send this to https://cacombos.com/contribute
check out the Samsung Band Selection app on the Play Store. Supposedly, it can unlock hidden bands.
I looked at it but I'm unsure which bands are available to Sprint/ T Mobile in the St. Louis area. I set to Automatic. Playing it safe I guess .
Also when I switch to 5G it doen't show any bands. The S20 + is capable of more 5G bands I hear
corvus.corax said:
check out the Samsung Band Selection app on the Play Store. Supposedly, it can unlock hidden bands.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Only can disable/enable bands what hardware support. If it doesn't you can't just randomly unlock bands.
Aerostar601 said:
I looked at it but I'm unsure which bands are available to Sprint/ T Mobile in the St. Louis area. I set to Automatic. Playing it safe I guess .
Also when I switch to 5G it doen't show any bands. The S20 + is capable of more 5G bands I hear
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
What model Samsung S20+ you have? From modem logs you could export some data what your phone support: https://mt-tech.fi/en/how-to-get-4g...ions-from-your-android-phone/#Samsung_Devices

device variant question

is there a variant that i can root and use on tmobile 5g?
Forget about trying to root Snapdragon versions.
@42o247 forget @roaduardo and his wrong answer.
if you want to root Snapdragon get SM-G9860 for S20+ works like a charm.
chieco said:
@42o247 forget @roaduardo and his wrong answer.
if you want to root Snapdragon get SM-G9860 for S20+ works like a charm.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I assume that's the HK version?
chieco said:
@42o247 forget @roaduardo and his wrong answer.
if you want to root Snapdragon get SM-G9860 for S20+ works like a charm.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
do you think that works with tmobile 5g?
roaduardo said:
I assume that's the HK version?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
yes.
42o247 said:
do you think that works with tmobile 5g?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
there are tons of information about this device. I gave you already the most important information which was SM-G9860. You can easily google SM-G9860 5G T-Mobile. Or search for the supported bands and the bands T-Mobile uses.
chieco said:
You can easily google SM-G9860 5G T-Mobile. Or search for the supported bands and the bands T-Mobile uses.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
i tried that before i even posted but most of the results are for the sm-g9860u and from the how to root guide it seemed like all the variants ending with U were unable to unlock the bootloader or root. i figured i would ask if anyone had a personal opinion or knowledge before wasting more of my time searching. thanks for the response though your thoughts are sincerely appreciated.
42o247 said:
i tried that before i even posted but most of the results are for the sm-g9860u and from the how to root guide it seemed like all the variants ending with U were unable to unlock the bootloader or root. i figured i would ask if anyone had a personal opinion or knowledge before wasting more of my time searching. thanks for the response though your thoughts are sincerely appreciated.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
These are T-mobile's 5G Bands.
Band n71 (600 MHz)
Band N260 (39 GHz)
Band N261 (28 GHz)
Band n41 (2.5 GHz)
These are the SM-G9880 and SM-G9860 5G Bands.
Bands Sub6
Band N41 (2.5 GHz)
Band N78 (3.5 GHz)
Band N79 (4.5 GHz)
Samsung S20 5G UW Bands
260, 261 mmWave
The device "should work" on Band N41. Also, keep in mind there are different variants of 5G Protocol. Low-Band, Mid-Band and Millimeter Wave. mmWave is the gold standard when speed is the only criteria.
mmWave high-band 5G: T-Mobile, AT&T and Verizon. About 10x faster than LTE with extremely low latency, which means you need to be standing really close to a tower or transmitter to get those speeds. Mid-band 5G: Sprint. About 6x faster than LTE, but with a smaller footprint than low-band. Low-band 5G: T-Mobile/AT&T. About 20 percent faster than 4G LTE.
If I were compelled to utilize 5G, which at this time I'm not, I would consider AT&T. They are the only Service Provider offering mmWave 5G on a Samsung 5G UW Device. Even though it has a Snapdragon SoC, I suspect the bootloader is locked like all of the US Carrier Devices.
varcor said:
These are T-mobile's 5G Bands.
Band n71 (600 MHz)
Band N260 (39 GHz)
Band N261 (28 GHz)
Band n41 (2.5 GHz)
These are the SM-G9880 and SM-G9860 5G Bands.
Bands Sub6
Band N41 (2.5 GHz)
Band N78 (3.5 GHz)
Band N79 (4.5 GHz)
Samsung S20 5G UW Bands
260, 261 mmWave
The device "should work" on Band N41. Also, keep in mind there are different variants of 5G Protocol. Low-Band, Mid-Band and Millimeter Wave. mmWave is the gold standard when speed is the only criteria.
mmWave high-band 5G: T-Mobile, AT&T and Verizon. About 10x faster than LTE with extremely low latency, which means you need to be standing really close to a tower or transmitter to get those speeds. Mid-band 5G: Sprint. About 6x faster than LTE, but with a smaller footprint than low-band. Low-band 5G: T-Mobile/AT&T. About 20 percent faster than 4G LTE.
If I were compelled to utilize 5G, which at this time I'm not, I would consider AT&T. They are the only Service Provider offering mmWave 5G on a Samsung 5G UW Device. Even though it has a Snapdragon SoC, I suspect the bootloader is locked like all of the US Carrier Devices.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
ill pass for now in the samsung troubles. seems to me that its not worth the trouble to find a samsung device that gets tmobile 5g and root. thanks again samsung
42o247 said:
ill pass for now in the samsung troubles. seems to me that its not worth the trouble to find a samsung device that gets tmobile 5g and root. thanks again samsung
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
yeah you should pass on Samsung in general and get a 8 Pro. But if your decision depends only on 5G I have to say it shouldn't be that important, because 5G isn't that relevant so far, and maybe for the coming 1-2 years. And I'm sure won't keep the device longer then that anyways...
Also 5G caused CORONA VIRUS!!! LOL just kidding,
42o247 said:
ill pass for now in the samsung troubles. seems to me that its not worth the trouble to find a samsung device that gets tmobile 5g and root. thanks again samsung
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You should pass on T-Mobile as well, their 5G squirts!
yeah tmobile isnt great and samsung is nerfed by the software. im giving up on cell phones and switching back to a landline
chieco said:
yes.
there are tons of information about this device. I gave you already the most important information which was SM-G9860. You can easily google SM-G9860 5G T-Mobile. Or search for the supported bands and the bands T-Mobile uses.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You can Google stuff? Word?
varcor said:
These are T-mobile's 5G Bands.
Band n71 (600 MHz)
Band N260 (39 GHz)
Band N261 (28 GHz)
Band n41 (2.5 GHz)
These are the SM-G9880 and SM-G9860 5G Bands.
Bands Sub6
Band N41 (2.5 GHz)
Band N78 (3.5 GHz)
Band N79 (4.5 GHz)
Samsung S20 5G UW Bands
260, 261 mmWave
The device "should work" on Band N41. Also, keep in mind there are different variants of 5G Protocol. Low-Band, Mid-Band and Millimeter Wave. mmWave is the gold standard when speed is the only criteria.
mmWave high-band 5G: T-Mobile, AT&T and Verizon. About 10x faster than LTE with extremely low latency, which means you need to be standing really close to a tower or transmitter to get those speeds. Mid-band 5G: Sprint. About 6x faster than LTE, but with a smaller footprint than low-band. Low-band 5G: T-Mobile/AT&T. About 20 percent faster than 4G LTE.
If I were compelled to utilize 5G, which at this time I'm not, I would consider AT&T. They are the only Service Provider offering mmWave 5G on a Samsung 5G UW Device. Even though it has a Snapdragon SoC, I suspect the bootloader is locked like all of the US Carrier Devices.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Even device support n41 ( 2.5 GHz) that doesn't mean it work in T-Mobile/Sprint 5G-network because it require anchor band on 4G. But i don't know much about this Hong Kong variant because haven't got any log from it. If someone have, please share. Here is instruction to get modem log: https://mt-tech.fi/en/how-to-get-4g...ons-from-your-android-phone/#Qualcomm_devices . Please send log to: https://cacombos.com/contribute
I have some S20 variants supported bands and these combinations in my site: https://cacombos.com/search?key=S20 . I just need more data from these devices to complete listing.
But in USA i recommend buy device in US. Devices from overseas doesn't often support 4G and 5G carrier combinations used in US so you get less speed on network.
olkitu said:
Even device support n41 ( 2.5 GHz) that doesn't mean it work in T-Mobile/Sprint 5G-network because it require anchor band on 4G. But i don't know much about this Hong Kong variant because haven't got any log from it. If someone have, please share. Here is instruction to get modem log: https://mt-tech.fi/en/how-to-get-4g...ons-from-your-android-phone/#Qualcomm_devices . Please send log to: https://cacombos.com/contribute
I have some S20 variants supported bands and these combinations in my site: https://cacombos.com/search?key=S20 . I just need more data from these devices to complete listing.
But in USA i recommend buy device in US. Devices from overseas doesn't often support 4G and 5G carrier combinations used in US so you get less speed on network.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
A great resource and good to know, thanks! I agree with your suggestion to purchase the device from your Service Provider, that will pretty much guarantee you'll have all Carrier Aggregation utilities and 5G Connectivity Protocols in place. Unfortunately, users want a phone which has everything, no bloatware, unlocked bootloader, universal connectivity, full carrier aggregation and the best SoC. With all the variants from Samsung and varied Service Provider metrics that's not realistic.
I have a few questions you may be qualified to answer. Does the first letter of a band being capitalized or not have significance? Example n71 or N71? Does this represent MHz versus GHz? Secondly, in the example above, both the device and AT&T have a number of matching 4G Bands. Would this indicate the device will be able to anchor to the carrier? Lastly, let's assume a device and the carrier have multiple matching bands. Who or what determines which band will be paired in a specific connection, will the carrier determine this based on location or traffic volume, does the user have the ability switch to a specific bandwidth?
varcor said:
A great resource and good to know, thanks! I agree with your suggestion to purchase the device from your Service Provider, that will pretty much guarantee you'll have all Carrier Aggregation utilities and 5G Connectivity Protocols in place. Unfortunately, users want a phone which has everything, no bloatware, unlocked bootloader, universal connectivity, full carrier aggregation and the best SoC. With all the variants from Samsung and varied Service Provider metrics that's not realistic.
I have a few questions you may be qualified to answer. Does the first letter of a band being capitalized or not have significance? Example n71 or N71? Does this represent MHz versus GHz? Secondly, in the example above, both the device and AT&T have a number of matching 4G Bands. Would this indicate the device will be able to anchor to the carrier? Lastly, let's assume a device and the carrier have multiple matching bands. Who or what determines which band will be paired in a specific connection, will the carrier determine this based on location or traffic volume, does the user have the ability switch to a specific bandwidth?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
n71 and N71 is same band 600 MHz 5G NR. But in cacombos.com you see different characters like C what means contiguous intra-band CA. Example 3C.
On cacombos.com you can see example combination 2A4-66A4A_n71A2A what means 2-66_71 CA combination. Band 66 is anchor band for n71 5G.

Questions about G9880 and T-Mobile

I have a bootloader unlocked, rooted Galaxy S20 Ultra SM-G9880 (Hong Kong version) that I am using on T-Mobile. However, I had some doubts about how it interacts with the various bands.
The phone does not support some of T-Mobile's LTE bands, and it does not seem to support any of their current 5G bands. Is there any way to change this with CSC changes or any other trickery?
Would AT&T be better for any of this?
When I use the Samsung band selector app, I see that NR B41 is supported. This is the Sprint spectrum that T-Mobile is repurposing, correct? Does that mean additional 5G and LTE coverage once the rollout is complete?
Another user was having problems enabling carrier aggregation. Is there a way of doing this?
Jonah50 said:
I have a bootloader unlocked, rooted Galaxy S20 Ultra SM-G9880 (Hong Kong version) that I am using on T-Mobile. However, I had some doubts about how it interacts with the various bands.
The phone does not support some of T-Mobile's LTE bands, and it does not seem to support any of their current 5G bands. Is there any way to change this with CSC changes or any other trickery?
Would AT&T be better for any of this?
When I use the Samsung band selector app, I see that NR B41 is supported. This is the Sprint spectrum that T-Mobile is repurposing, correct? Does that mean additional 5G and LTE coverage once the rollout is complete?
Another user was having problems enabling carrier aggregation. Is there a way of doing this?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You can't change to a US CSC on your device. Some users are reporting 5G works only on SIM2. Carrier Aggregation isn't compatible in the US with the SM-G9880. I have the Hong Kong variant on T-mobile and 4G LTE works fine.
varcor said:
You can't change to a US CSC on your device. Some users are reporting 5G works only on SIM2. Carrier Aggregation isn't compatible in the US with the SM-G9880. I have the Hong Kong variant on T-mobile and 4G LTE works fine.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Would you happen to know if our imei works with 5g on t mobile? I just switched last month from att. On att, you would have to call and give an att imei in order for 5g to work and I'm wondering if t mobile is the same way or if it works out of the box with our imei.
Also, I have an SD card and seems like I cannot have a Sim on slot 2 and an SD at the same time, do you happen to know if an esim will get 5g?
m_reyna_16 said:
Would you happen to know if our imei works with 5g on t mobile? I just switched last month from att. On att, you would have to call and give an att imei in order for 5g to work and I'm wondering if t mobile is the same way or if it works out of the box with our imei.
Also, I have an SD card and seems like I cannot have a Sim on slot 2 and an SD at the same time, do you happen to know if an esim will get 5g?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That's a question for T-mobile. It's not a question of your IMEI, it's whether or not your device's available 4G and 5G bands are compatible with T-mobile. I don't know what model you have but if it's a US model eSim isn't available on S20 devices. Only Exynos devices have eSim capabilities.
varcor said:
That's a question for T-mobile. It's not a question of your IMEI, it's whether or not your device's available 4G and 5G bands are compatible with T-mobile. I don't know what model you have but if it's a US model eSim isn't available on S20 devices. Only Exynos devices have eSim capabilities.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have the same model that's been on topic... The SM-G9880...
SM-G9880 isn't eSim enabled, only Exynos variants offer this. 5G may work, take it to your local T-mobile store and see if they can set it up. Often times information coming from a CSR over the phone isn't reliable. If it worked with AT&T on SIM 1 T-mobile it MAY work as well however many users have stated it only works on SIM 2. Even though T-mobile's 5G network has a larger coverage area they can't match the speed of AT&T's mmWave network.
varcor said:
That's a question for T-mobile. It's not a question of your IMEI, it's whether or not your device's available 4G and 5G bands are compatible with T-mobile. I don't know what model you have but if it's a US model eSim isn't available on S20 devices. Only Exynos devices have eSim capabilities.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I know that some people were trying to enable eSIM on rooted Snapdragon S20 Ultra devices. Did anything ever happen with that?
Jonah50 said:
I know that some people were trying to enable eSIM on rooted Snapdragon S20 Ultra devices. Did anything ever happen with that?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you root the device I suppose it's possible to override an eSim block on the SM-G9880 but I'm not aware of anyone achieving it. The only Snapdragon variant which offers eSim at this time is the Galaxy Fold. I don't understand what the value of eSim is on a Dual SIM device. Even if you travel to a different country it's a simple choice, keep the SD Card in or use both SIM's and rely on internal memory for storage.
Did anyone try using BRI CSC to see if CA works in the USA?

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