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Steve 'Chippy' Paine

Are all these spectrum within the current mobile phone radio specs or will they require new hardware? Clearly LTE requires new hardware but if the spectrum owners use UMTS, will they work with existing phones?

Christian von der Ropp

Afaik there's only hardware for GSM at 1800 and UMTS at 2100 MHz available. The 2600 MHz band has been specified for UMTS (as "band VII" or "IMT-e"), but I haven't seen appropriate hardware yet.
All three aforementioned bands are part of the LTE-specifications, but it will take a while until hardware becomes available on a commercial scale. Especially the lack of terminals will last a while.
However the 800 MHz band still hasn't been specified for any standard.

So I expect the 2100 MHz blocks to be used to extend UMTS capacity and perhaps the 1800 MHz band for GSM-extension while the other bands will be unused until LTE is being rolled out.

Another issue, which I hope will be solved with LTE-terminals, is the limited multiband capability of current 3G devices. Except for Sierra Wireless' MC8795V datacard, there is no 3G device available with support for more than three 3G-frequency bands. I hope one will manage to get a couple more of frequencies into LTE-devices in order to maintain intercontinental roaming capability, as LTE will be scattered over so many bands (probably even 3-4 per one country in some cases).

David Boettger

NTT DoCoMo is deploying LTE at 2.1 GHz, so hardware for that combination will exist as well.

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