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Kansas Cellular Reviews
Mountain Wireless presents an opinionated review of wireless and cellular phone services in Kansas. This is information gained from personal experience, user interviews, press releases, advertising material, newsgroups and wireless web sites.For Ratings of these carriers, Click Here.
ALLTEL
Alltel has agreed to be purchased by Verizon Wireless. This transaction is not expected to be
completed until 2009. While we feel this
is not a good deal for the cellular consumer,
there is no reason to avoid signing up with
Alltel for now. Most plans will be honored
and the changeover will be relatively painless.
We are following developments on the Mountain Wireless Blog. In the meantime, Alltel covers more real
estate in the US than any other carrier.
Most of that territory is rural and in those
areas they are often the best carrier available.
Both in the rural and areas and the large
cities they serve they have very good coverage,
good customer service and utilize a fairly
advanced network. You can take your Alltel
phone into most urban areas and still get
excellent coverage and reliable data service.
To achieve this goal, Alltel phones will
roam on Sprint more often than other carriers.
Sprint has good broadband services, but after
the ownership change you will be roaming
on Verizon's huge network, which covers more
territory that Sprint. Alltel offers "Local"
and "No-Roaming-Charges-Anywhere"
plans, and is the only large carrier that
offers a "North American" plan
which includes roaming calls from Mexico
and Canada. Expect this to go away under
Verizon, but may be 'grandfathered.' With
Alltel's domination of rural coverage, they
are the king of roaming carriers, serving
roamers from most of the other carriers,
primarily in the western half of the US.
They offer CDMA service to their own customers
and roamers, and GSM service for roamers,
but not in all areas. They have been aggressive
in pricing their plans and features, and
also offer a basic, Unlimited plan. Pros: Good coverage, very good prices, a
variety of plans, good customer service,
good broadband services including while roaming.
Cons: Roaming may be a problem when favoring
Sprint, fewer phone choices, Alltel isn't
aggressively adding new towers.
Get Online Discounts on Alltel Phones
AT&T
AT&T is what was once Cingular, part
of which once was AT&T Wireless. Try
not be confused. Today's AT&T has a large
network, but in the west, has a lot less
spectrum available than in the rest of the
country. They continue to expand, but outside
of urban areas and off interstate highways
they depend on other carriers to provide
coverage. Fortunately, the 'roaming' coverage
is as good as being on the AT&T network,
and most of the coverage is included within
your plan minutes. With GSM, AT&T will
roam more readily, internationally.
Much of the AT&T network in the interior
west is made up of the old AT&T Wireless
network which was not among the best. They
still suffer from some coverage 'holes',
but they are updating these areas. Notable
is their
"Corridor" project which provides excellent service along several
stretches of interstate highways. AT&T's
current plans include only the GSM network,
thus have some areas of the country with
no service due to a lack of GSM coverage,
or the inability to access existing analog
networks, even for 911 service. In several
markets where AT&T operates at 1900 MHz
only, we have been very disappointed. The
biggest surprise is where Cingular combined
with the old AT&T Wireless. We would
have expected coverage to improve dramatically,
but that is not the case. Not all AT&T
1900 MHz-only markets are equal, though.
In Arizona AT&T is generally as good
as the others, but in northern Ohio it is
disappointing, to the point of being unusable,
although they have covered the major roads
adequately in those areas. This map shows
AT&T 1900 MHz-only areas. AT&T offers a variety of plans including
unlimited minutes and services.
Pros: AT&T has a very large network and
covers much of the nation, usage is transparent
whether on- or off-network, good digital
and data services, good national plans, "Rollover"
for those who can use it, "Unlimited"
calling plan available, a good selection
of phones. In some areas, like California,
there have been big improvements in coverage.
Excellent international roaming capabilities.
Cons: AT&T plans aren't as generous as
some, customers can only access GSM networks
which is not quite as universally available
as CDMA, customer service is sometimes below
average.
Get Online Discounts on Wireless from AT&T.
CINGULAR WIRELESS
Cingular is now known as AT&T.
CRICKET
Cricket offers unlimited wireless usage for
one price, but coverage may be a little spotty.
For the price, it may work well for you,
or your family. They have a variety of plans.
With unlimited usage, the circuits may become
overloaded. Plans with nationwide roaming
are available but those minutes are not unlimited.
Cricket is the largest "Unlimited' carrier
and is adding many new markets, and your
minutes can be unlimited in each of those
markets. You can use Cricket to replace a
home wireline. In some markets, coverage
is being expanded. Pros: Talk as much as you want, no contract,
most data & digital serves are included.
Cons: You must pre-pay, "unlimited"
coverage is limited to just within their
home area(s), roaming is available but at
an extra charge, some dropped calls when
circuits are busy.
Get Online Discounts from Cricket
EPIC PCS:
Epic PCS serves the SW corner of Kansas and
part of the Oklahoma panhandle. They are
a GSM carrier using 1900 MHz frequencies
so you should expect coverage along the main
roads but not some of the areas between them.
They offer a basic "unlimited"
plan for local calls. They try to serve customers
with a similar experience as a wireline in
that if it's a long distance call on wireline,
it is on Epic PCS as well. They are related
to EpicTouch that offers internet and other advanced
communication services and is related to
the local wireline, the Independent Telephone
Company. As of 2007 they have 36 cell sites.
As usual, we recommend that you give a local
carrier like this a try.
NEX-TECH WIRELESS
Based in Hays, Kansas, Nex-Tech is a new
carrier that was formed with help from the
Sprint Roaming Alliance. Nex-Tech is not
like the old Sprint "affiliates",
they seem to operate independently and allow
their customers to roam on the Sprint network.
They also seem to be inking their own roaming
agreements with other wireless carriers.
Nex-Tech in turn will fill a big gap for
Sprint customers across western Kansas and
along the I-70 corridor in Colorado to near
Denver. Nex-Tech is aiming for CDMA coverage
in every western Kansas town "with more
than 300 people." They are a partnership
of several local telephone co-ops so we would
expect customer service to be above average. Coverage is at 1900 MHz, but
with their projected number of sites, that shouldn't be a disadvantage.
They may have coverage where other carriers
have none. They have opened several retail
locations. While they offer local coverage
along I-70 in Colorado, they are not soliciting
Colorado customers. They seem to hope to
operate under the radar of another major
carrier by offering similar features, like
"Rollover Minutes" and "2Go-Phone", which are close to, or identical
to registered trademarks of another carrier.
NEXTEL
Nextel is a part Sprint and in some offerings,
Sprint hides Nextel's features. The combo
has allowed the two networks to start sharing
cell sites to improve coverage. Nextel's
spectrum is made up from a bunch of 2-way
radio channels, and they suffer from marginal
audio in some markets. Their coverage is
more robust in certain areas than others.
They cover urban areas and some interstates,
but there is little roaming elsewhere in
the state. They have an efficient '2-way'
radio feature which is handy for a business
or a family. Some of their plans aren't very
competitive, but they do offer free incoming
calls. They use 850 MHz so they have a strong
signal in most areas. There are rumors that
Sprint wants to sell off the Nextel network,
which may or may not include Nextel customers.
Pros: The Direct Connect is a handy 'walkie-talkie'
service, they are still improving coverage,
good digital features. Cons: Some markets
have poor audio, they also have coverage
limits and very limited roaming, most of
their phones are big and lack variety, Sprint
has not treated Nextel customers as well
as those using the Sprint network.
SPRINT
Sprint has a national, feature-rich digital
network. Their coverage is a little "fragile",
but where it's good, it's very good. You
can roam over more territory than any other
single carrier. Sprint has a good selection
of phones. Their plans include roaming over
most of the country, and work about as well
as any National plan. They offer an inexpensive
"basic" plan for only $30 per month.
They also offer a few Unlimited plans with
lots of features included. Sprint has added
service by taking over parts of some carriers'
networks, and "sharing" spectrum
with others. Sprint PCS merged with Nextel which has created some beneficial network
configurations, including sharing of cell
sites. Sprint roaming often prefers the Alltel network which, where available, gives Sprint
customers excellent data throughput. Many
Sprint phones have the ability to force the
phone to "Roam Only", helping you
use the strongest network, however there
is a limit to how much roaming you can do,
generally 50%. Pros: Sprint gives you good value for your
money, but is not necessarily the cheapest.
Sprint covers every urban area in the U.S.,
maintains local service stores, very good
roaming capabilities, their digital and data
network work very well, good selection of
phones. Sprint has excellent roaming agreements,
while some other carriers are restricting
theirs. Cons: You might find a weak area
right where you want coverage, some of their
plans are not very competitive, customer service is a notch below average.
Click here for more Sprint Pros & Cons
Get Online Discounts on Sprint Phones
T-MOBILE
T-Mobile works very well within their service
area. While they have a slight disadvantage
with their higher PCS frequency, they make
up for it with strategically-located sites.
T-Mobile doesn't serve many rural areas,
but provides coverage along many interstates.
They offer roaming in rural areas, and the
network is still growing, although often
they're just 'filling in'. They offer some
handy features like "My-Favs" which
includes Unlimited calling to your choice
of five numbers, regardless of network, "Kid
Connect" which helps you limit the amount
of charges your kids can rack up, and an
Unlimited "Hot Spot" plan using
your home wi-fi connection. They have plans
that include unlimited voice and messaging.
Pros: Generous included-minute plans, National
and Regional plans, "Unlimited" calling plan available, good urban coverage, good choice of phones,
good pre-paid plans, good roaming capabilities,
including internationally. Good customer
service. Cons: Some weak spots, limited data
bandwidth, high international roaming charges.
Get Online Discounts from T-Mobile
UNICEL
Most of Unicel has been purchased by Verizon Wireless. Some markets will be sold to another carrier.
Get details about the final transaction, to find out what areas are affected. We have no information on a new buyer. Unicel areas not acquired by Verizon will
continue to be operated as before with several
competitive Local and National plans. Pros: Good coverage, Local and National plans
available, reasonable plan prices. Cons:
Off-Peak minutes are capped at 500 to 1,000
minutes and Mobile to Mobile is included
only with Family plans.
US CELLULAR
This is a good company that offers good coverage,
good plans and lots of features, and a good
selection of CDMA phones. Unlimited incoming
calls are available, it's an extra feature
on Regional and Family plans. In Chicago
they use 1900 MHz frequencies which have
more dead spots. Pros: Their price plans are competitive,
and they offer National and Regional plans,
"Unlimited" calling plan available,
good customer service, National plans appear
to be all-inclusive and roaming has good
coverage, mostly with Verizon Wireless. Cons:
Mobile to Mobile minutes are extra except
on Family plans, and Night & Weekend
minutes are extra on Regional plans.
VERIZON WIRELESS
Verizon's claim to fame is superior coverage,
especially in the west. They use PCS frequencies
only in a few areas, but they have constructed
those networks well. In the few places where they don't have their
own coverage, they have roaming agreements
with other carriers, normally the carriers
with superior coverage. Therefore, their
"National" plans, which include
almost all of the country are about as close
to 'wall-to-wall" as you can get. Their
reasonably-priced plans have no roaming or
long distance charges, and they also throw
in Unlimited Night and Weekend minutes as
well as Unlimited calls among users both
on and off their own network (there are a
few exceptions). They offer fairly competitive
prices, and often have promotions. They also
offer plans that include Unlimited Voice
and other features at various fixed price
levels. Data service is excellent with various
price plans. Verizon forces their phone manufacturers
to offer a "standardized" user
interface, limiting menu and font variations.
This could mean the screen appearance may
not be to your liking or the fonts may be
too small. Pros: Verizon has reasonably-priced plans,
"Unlimited" calling plans available,
extensive coverage, wide-ranging National
plans, excellent customer service, all-digital
service, and 'customer-friendly' policies.
Cons: Some Verizon plans are a little more
expensive, Customer Service closes at 11pm,
but technical assistance is available 24/7,
there are some billing oddities, they don't
offer as many "cute" phones, they
'cripple' some User Interface functions like
larger fonts. Make sure you can read their
submenus before buying. Some of their data
services are not available while roaming.
Click here for additional Verizon Pros & Cons
Get Online Discounts from Verizon Wireless
WESTLINK:
Westlink serves the SW corner of Kansas.
They are a GSM carrier using 1900 MHz frequencies
so you should expect coverage along the main
roads but not the large areas between them.
They offer a few good phones and their plans
are fairly reasonable. We're guessing they
have a large percentage of roaming users.
Small, local companies like this usually
have better service than most, especially
those who are part of the local wireline
co-operative. We always recommend you give
a local company a try.
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