As multiple people have stated earlier, it doesn’t matter what the number of bars read or what the indicated signal strength in dBm is showing.
It matters how the phone works in the real world. And in that respect it does not work as well as other phones (with regards to radio performance. Android 4.x is much better than Froyo or Gingerbread and has much more potential, in my opinion). Period. In driving the same route to work each day (64 miles round trip), the phone will lose connection to the 4G network quicker. The voice quality when switching between towers suffers quicker (there are more dropouts in voice calls than other phones I’ve used recently). In real world, everyday use, it seems the radios in this phone may not be up to par with others on Verizon’s network.
I have tried various combinations of Android 4.x and different radios. My current is 4.03 OS and the 4.03 radios. I will see how these perform today (another Walmart run is in the mix).
But we shouldn’t have to try this & try that just to make the phone usable in the real world. Real world to me is defined as driving around town, going to appointments, going to retail stores, going to work, sitting on my porch, taking a walk, doing normal everyday things that me and my family do. Not constantly sitting in one spot, not moving the phone, looking at dBm readings and running speed tests. Based on what I have encountered with the GNex, normal people (not us phone geeks) could have a hard time keeping this phone and using it as their only phone.
Now granted I’m a phone geek/nut. I love messing with them. I’m not really complaining about the GNex. I love the form factor, the way it feels, the ease of unlocking the bootloader, rooting it and loading custom roms. It’s fun. It’s a hobby. But again in the real world, I need the phone I’m carrying to do its job. And that is to make phone calls and stayed connected reliably to a data network.
The phones I currently I have for Verizon are:
Thunderbolt (rooted and running custom ROM)
RAZR (stock)
GNex (rooted and running custom ROM)
Droid Incredible 2 (stock)
Trophy (stock)
Blackberry Bold 9650 (actually two of these, one with 5.0, the other with 6.0 BBOS)
Out of these, the RAZR is hands down the best everyday performer in regards to voice calls and data. It might not ultimately be the fastest (although with fairly constant 30mbps down and 15mbps up readings on LTE, it’s up there), but voice performance is outstanding with the RAZR. The others are ok, with the Blackberries, DINC 2 and the Trophy being towards the bottom of the group with regards to 3G data performance and but fairly equal with regards to voice.
This is in no way a slam against the GNex (definitely keeping it). I’m just stating what I have encountered with the device in my neck of the woods. Not really woods, just typical suburban life here in middle TN. I’m not sure what kind of real world testing Verizon, Samsung & Google did with this phone. But in typical fashion with regards to the radios that Samsung uses, they just don’t seem up to par (and this coming from someone who gets to use phones from all major carriers, except for TMobile, in the US).