Verizon’s sneaky 5G naming change will impact its iPhone SE (2022) and iPad Air (2022) users
T-Mobile was the only major U.S. carrier to build its 5G network the right way
But one U.S. carrier has been ahead of its rivals every step of the way and that is T-Mobile. But before we dive into that, let’s examine the low-band spectrum. Ever wonder why so often when you’re connected to a 5G signal it feels no faster than 4G? That’s because low-band 5G signals are indeed not much faster than 4G LTE signals if they are faster at all.
But low-band does travel farther than mmWave and its signals are not blocked by structures. As a result, the odds favor that you’ll be connected to low-band 5G in the states albeit at data speeds no faster than 4G LTE. But T-Mobile made a brilliant move by acquiring Sprint for $26 billion. By purchasing Sprint, T-Mobile was buying a hoard of mid-band 2.5GHz spectrum. Hey, you didn’t think that T-Mobile wanted Sprint for its operations, did you?
The C-band airwaves that were auctioned off were in the 3.7GHz-3.98GHz range putting them in the mid-band category. However, these signals can interfere with certain altimeters on commercial airplanes. The altimeter tells the pilot how far above the ground a plane is flying at and is an important tool.
Apple’s iPhone SE (2022) and iPad Air (2022) do not support its 5G mmWave signals
The Verge also notes that Big Red’s version of the Galaxy S20 features less memory and no microSD slot so that there is room for the mmWave 5G radio. And with this in mind, Apple was faced with this situation again with the iPhone SE (2022) and the iPad Air (2022).
Sure, Verizon could have chosen not to offer the new devices or demand that Apple make a special model that would work with its mmWave signal. Instead, it will carry the phone and the tablet as is and thanks to a change it made last month in how it brands its 5G services, both Apple devices will show support for Verizon’s Ultra Wideband service.
But…what? Huh? How could that be? Didn’t we just say that the iPhone SE (2022) and iPad Air (2022) don’t support mmWave? Yes, we did. But Verizon had a trick up its sleeve.
Up until February, Verizon’s Ultra Wideband service (known as 5G UW on your iPhone’s status bar) referred to mmWave 5G ONLY. But last month, whether done on purpose in advance of the Apple event or not, the nation’s largest carrier decided to include mid-band 5G in the Ultra Wideband category. Now, when you see the 5G UW icon on your phone, you might be connected to a mid-band 5G network running at 300Mbps down as opposed to finding an extremely rare mmWave signal with download speeds approaching 1Gbps.
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