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21-10-2016 07:04 PM
Hi,
Basically as the title says, since upgrading to an iPhone 7 Plus my 4G speed has been atrocious. For easily 90% of the time the speed is anything from a 10th to a 5th of the speed I get when using my iPhone 6 Plus.
I'm not sure why this should be, I'm in the same location, same everything other than the phone and the iPhone 7 series has a supposedly faster LTE chipset than that of the iPhone 6. So why has my network performance degraded so much?
This isn't exactly a new thing with Vodafone, it's happened before in my area on more than one occasion. I'm really looking forward to the end of my contract at this point so I can finally switch back to O2 I never had these problems with them, it won't come soon enough.
Any opinions or suggestions (real ones, not telling me where to stick it ;D) welcomed.
Cheers.
21-10-2016 07:22 PM
Hi,
I've seen a YouTube video saying there's a difference between write speeds depending on capacity chosen on the iPhone 7 but the data speeds shouldn't be affected.
If you have an Apple Store local they could run a diagnostic.
Have you run speed tests via perhaps Ookla SpeedTest.net taking into account speeds will fluctuate depending on different factors. Just to add running speed tests do use around approx 40mb'ish of data allowance.
Current Phone >
Samsung Galaxy s²³ Ultra 512gb Phantom Black.
22-10-2016 09:48 AM - edited 22-10-2016 10:57 AM
@BandOfBrothers wrote:I've seen a YouTube video saying there's a difference between write speeds depending on capacity chosen on the iPhone 7 but the data speeds shouldn't be affected.
The iPhone 7 uses either a modem manufactured by Intel or Qualcomm. This, like other components, is to ensure supply during ramp up and production.
The Intel modem is the slower of the two, and typically locked iPhone 7 devices (those not sold sim-free) are the model using the slower Intel variant.
Not only is it a spec sheet difference between the two devices, in real world usage the difference can be as large as 30%. The slower Intel modem also has less support for GSM networks than the Qualcomm alternative.
The Qualcomm modem supports both CDMA and GSM networks, so for instance Verizon handsets in the US will use the faster Qualcomm modem.
In the UK I expect that all of the network tied/sold devices are using the Intel modem and unlocked devices such as those from Apple and Carphone Warehouse (initially unlocked before locking to first SIM card) will be using the Qualcomm variant.
Lastly, you can identify which modem your iPhone 7 has by looking at the model number 'AXXXX' and comparing it to Apple's list of supported networks for that model.
22-10-2016 10:01 AM
Thank you for your info.
Have you viewed the YouTube video.
It specifically talks about the difference being in the on board gb capacity to how fast it writes.
Current Phone >
Samsung Galaxy s²³ Ultra 512gb Phantom Black.
22-10-2016 10:56 AM
That's completely seperate, the write and read speeds between capacities, specifically the lower write speeds of the 32GB model would still not be saturated by the the 4G speed if downloading data.
22-10-2016 09:01 PM
22-10-2016 10:27 PM
That's interesting; perhaps all UK stock is using the Intel variant due to no need for CDMA?
22-10-2016 10:45 PM
23-10-2016 04:59 PM
23-10-2016 06:47 PM
Sounds like a mast issue, if Vodafone are anything like 3 they can run a live diagnostic over the phone, this is vodafone though....
Does anything improve when you connect to a new mast?