Title states it all. I bought one of these BlackBerries (pictured right) from Verizon to use in both the U.S. and Canada. I figured – global phone right? And pretty much every network supported?
Yep. Well, to a certain extent. Here’s some data ripped off handy-dandy Wikpiedia, though formatted nicer:
- Quad band GSM 850 900 1800 1900 MHz
- GPRS/EDGE and Uni band UMTS/HSDPA 2100MHz
- Dual band CDMA2000/EV-DO Rev. A 800 1900
So here we have it: just about every network used by modern cellular companies supported. Cool. This means I can just use local services rather than Verizon’s roaming packages, right?
Breaking this down though, Verizon has the CDMA portion of the phone locked. You *could* reprogram it, but it would be an immense pain. So, using CDMA on another carrier is not feasibly possible for the short periods of time in Canada.
So we can use GSM now in Canada now, right? Yeah, but only if you want to be with Rogers. While Rogers is not a bad company, they are the only GSM provider in Canada, and their network has been said to be spotty in coverage at times. Bell and Telus, however, are a much different story.
With Telus and Bell’s recent collaboration, Canada has access to a new high speed network, which does not use the CDMA standard, and is not GSM. And the coverage is terrific, other than in a few cities where the network has not been rolled out yet. Great! Or so I thought.
The key point to notice: 2100mhz. Not the 850/1900mhz supported by Bell and Telus. So unfortunately neither of these providers can be used with a BlackBerry Storm 9550 using their SIM card capabilities. Bummer.
So for those of you fellow Canadians spending lots of time in the U.S., or vice versa: you’re going to be stuck with Rogers if you go down this route.
If only standards were standard..