Omega Owners Forum
Chat Area => General Discussion Area => Topic started by: JamesV6CDX on 22 October 2016, 22:56:23
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I have an iPhone 5s 16GB. I've had it for years and the contract is long paid off. I'm currently using it on a sim only plan, which gives me nearly everything I need for around £12 a month.
I recently dropped said iPhone and smashed the screen. Yes I could replace the screen, but, the phone has been in the bath twice, and has successfully dried out on both occasions, and seeing as I use my phone for nearly everything, I thought it's time to replace it.
My requirements are less than 300 minutes calls, ideally unlimited texts, (although most of my messages go over iMessage or WhatsApp). I currently have a limit of 2GB data which I regularly run over a bit, so ideally I want to up this to 8GB plus of data, maybe even more.
I have been in the three store today, who I am currently with. For an iPhone 7 32Gb, with a 30gb data plan (for the price of 8GB) they want 56 quid a month!
Other stores are very similar. I tried knocking down to the 6s model, but the cost saving is marginal.
I just felt totally uninspired, and walked away empty handed.
I looked on USwitch. I found a deal on there, which suited me fine, iPhone 7, with decent limits, for £35 month on EE.
I went into the EE store, and asked if they could match the deal there, and they stated no, and told me the online deals have a "catch" whereby after a few months the monthly payments increase by about £15?
Having read the small print on USwitch there is a bit saying prices may rise "with inflation" so I'm not sure if salesman is being truthful or just trying to make my buy from his store.
Any tips? It's a minefield and I left town frustrated, thinking I may just buy parts for my old 5s after all !!!
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The only tip is to buy the handset outright. Cheap deals always alarm me!
I've just upgraded both handsets with Three (been a customer for about 12 years and have to say that the service is generally superb) and priced buying handsets outright (plus sim only contract) and the monthly contract payment and the price over 2 years was almost identical.
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I recently switched to a sim only deal with 3 as I decided there was no point in changing my phone as it works fine and does everything I need of it even if it is ancient and obsolete in the eyes of some. When it dies I'll buy another outright, maybe even 2nd hand. Bangernomics for phones! :y
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Ive replaced both our phones this year, at 3.5 and 4 years old. (got a 6SE and a 7)
Paid full cash price for them both and stayed sim only....I save half the sim only saving into a separate account to allow this to be done painlessly when needed.
Its a lot to pay out, so have to get in the mindset that the money was saved specifically for this purpose.
Pay about £11 each a month for phones. Also happy in the knowledge that because they were bought in the apple shop, I can change the SIMs to any other network as and when I want to.
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Cant remember the last time I had an actual Phone on Contract, been Sim Only for ages now, probably saved a fortune over the years, If I need a newer phone just buy it. More likely to get some decent Onging Airtime discount with Sim Only as well every time the contracts up.
As for your EE shop salesman He's talking B@llocks, the index linked thing is about 50p pm if the Networks can be arsed to actually charge it.
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I guess it depends on if you really want an iPhone....
You can buy 4G Android smartphones for £70-£90* (depending on screen size) unlocked, so ready to take any payg sim you want :y
* That's not from Egay or bought from HK or the like
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Ive replaced both our phones this year, at 3.5 and 4 years old. (got a 6SE and a 7)
Paid full cash price for them both and stayed sim only....I save half the sim only saving into a separate account to allow this to be done painlessly when needed.
Its a lot to pay out, so have to get in the mindset that the money was saved specifically for this purpose.
Pay about £11 each a month for phones. Also happy in the knowledge that because they were bought in the apple shop, I can change the SIMs to any other network as and when I want to.
All handsets from Three are unlocked ;)
I was informed that a factory reset on an iPhone removes the sim lock anyway :-\
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AFAIK all except retail from Apple come unlocked.....then lock to the first SIM entered.
Unlocking requires both a code from network and itunes.
Not actually done it, but thats my understanding.
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I was informed that a factory reset on an iPhone removes the sim lock anyway :-\
Nope. Absolutely not.
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AFAIK all except retail from Apple come unlocked.....then lock to the first SIM entered.
Unlocking requires both a code from network and itunes.
Not actually done it, but thats my understanding.
The Whorehouse are, I believe, the only ones who do that. Not sure if it applies to crApple, as their locking system is based on a database, rather than crypto codes.
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I always buy my handset outright, then use whatever deal is best - currently a tenner a month on Evil Everywhere (who have by far the best data capability by some margin), giving me 250mins, ultd text, 4.1Gb data.
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I always buy my handset outright, then use whatever deal is best - currently a tenner a month on Evil Everywhere (who have by far the best data capability by some margin), giving me 250mins, ultd text, 4.1Gb data.
I guess it depends on what you mean by that? I tried a EE sim in my phone last month, as I was experiencing problems with google maps and I thought I might be GG (original sim) buggering around with the data...but the EE sim didn't fix the problem and in fact it was worse for data coverage where I live, I kept losing data connection with the EE sim, not good when I have a app on my phone to receive taxi jobs! so ive reverted back to the GG sim, data coverage is much better with GG (O2) where I live :)
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Currently debating a network change (from O2) myself.....
Where to is another question altogether ;D
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Trouble with NiffNaff is you may get a 3G (or if you're really lucky, 4G signal), but its bandwidth is unusable. A 2G signal, which sadly O2 still has more of than 3G/4G, is utterly unusable on NiffNaff.
That's why I'm down to 1 NiffNaff SIM now (from 5). I've found EE virtually always has coverage, and the vast majority of the time that's 3G/4G, and the throughput is useable (on 3G/4G - 2G (which EE has very little of) "works" but needs patience). EE's big problem is its 3G is all up at the 1.8Ghz which has poor penetration in buildings and heavily wooded areas, unlike O2's predominantly 900Mhz 3G. EE mostly has the best 4G frequencies though.
Obviously, masts locations will impact local specifics.
But overall, I'm far happier with EE than I am with GG... ...to the point that I don't usually buy other SIMs and take a MiFi when I go on hols in blighty.
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Currently debating a network change (from O2) myself.....
Where to is another question altogether ;D
When I finally got sick of GG/O2, I bought a PAYG SIM from other providers put didn't port my number, and just used each for a month :)
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Currently debating a network change (from O2) myself.....
Where to is another question altogether ;D
I'm with three which used to be OK. 4G and five bars all the time. Just lately my phone has been telling me I'm not registered on the network and I'm having to go outside to get a signal. I'm on a 12 month sim only, for now.
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Currently debating a network change (from O2) myself.....
Where to is another question altogether ;D
I'm with three which used to be OK. 4G and five bars all the time. Just lately my phone has been telling me I'm not registered on the network and I'm having to go outside to get a signal. I'm on a 12 month sim only, for now.
That smacks of potential capacity issues on your local mast/area...
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Currently debating a network change (from O2) myself.....
Where to is another question altogether ;D
I'm with three which used to be OK. 4G and five bars all the time. Just lately my phone has been telling me I'm not registered on the network and I'm having to go outside to get a signal. I'm on a 12 month sim only, for now.
That smacks of potential capacity issues on your local mast/area...
Probably. Their answer is an app that uses wifi for calls, so they can just wash their hands of the coverage issues.
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Any one got experience of EE via the BT network. At a fiver a month sounds like it could be a cheap option
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Any one got experience of EE via the BT network. At a fiver a month sounds like it could be a cheap option
Yes. But with 4G, that 500Mb can be gone in under a minute.
Works well enough. Can't really tell any different between my works BT Mobile and my personal EE, though one is a Windows phone and one is an iPhone, so difficult to draw direct comparisons.
Neither give goodies like Visual Voicemail, and my personal EE is not Double Speed (so tops out around 35Mb download on a good day (but always above 20Mb down if in 4G area)). Not sure if double speed enabled on my BT Mobile SIM.
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If you can possibly afford it, buy the phone outright.
If you calculate it out, buying a phone via a contract vs an equivalent sim only contract gives you an implicit interest rate of well over 10% in a lot of cases.
I'm currently with 3 paying £16pcm. But that's really due to their "feel at home" scheme which is a steal for the Amount of traveling I have to do.
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Yes. But with 4G, that 500Mb can be gone in under a minute.
that would be over 67Mbps then :o
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Yes. But with 4G, that 500Mb can be gone in under a minute.
that would be over 67Mbps then :o
OK, 90s.