No, not at all. Perfect for me w AT&T.
One thing I did was go to my local att corp store and have them scan the imei from my N5 and give me a new Micro sim card. I was using a Nano sim in the Moto X.
Just being the box down to att and let them scan it.
Don't forget to shut your phone down completely after they do their thing in the computer.
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Did much same thing. Most important is their having your IMEI in their computer system. Good luck!
Sent from my Nexus 5 using Tapatalk
Please explain this to me. I'm ignorant about this issue. What are the advantages in having the IMEI in the AT&T computer system? I'm using the original micro sim issued with my S3. I have no problem getting LTE when off wifi and in an LTE area.
There is no reason to ask AT&T scan your IMEI at all. The minute you connected your phone to AT&T network, your IMEI is automatically transmitted to AT&T on your account. There is only downside to do so (so AT&T knows you are using a smartphone and hence will require you to pay for Smartphone data plan from now on).
N5 will switch to HSPA when LTE signal is too low. It tends to hold on to HSPA until LTE signal back to strong again. There is no need to reboot the phone (you can just toggle the airplane mode) but move to a location with better LTE signal.
Having an issue with Lte on att. I can connect to Lte on a reboot. When Lte is not available, I drop to Hspa fine. The issue is the N5 won't connect back to Lte without a reboot. Anybody else see this or have a solution?
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Having an issue with Lte on att. I can connect to Lte on a reboot. When Lte is not available, I drop to Hspa fine. The issue is the N5 won't connect back to Lte without a reboot. Anybody else see this or have a solution?
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I saw the same thing the other day. Had full LTE signal strength and I had no data. Airplane ,mode of and on cures it.I have a problem where it wants to disconnect from LTE and move over to HSPA+. It only moves back when I get a stronger LTE signal but it's sort of wonky. Toggling airplane mode does the trick. There is a bug in the radio which is causing all sorts of problems including this. Hopefully Google releases a fix and fast.
Sent from my Nexus 5 using Tapatalk
There is no reason to ask AT&T scan your IMEI at all. The minute you connected your phone to AT&T network, your IMEI is automatically transmitted to AT&T on your account. There is only downside to do so (so AT&T knows you are using a smartphone and hence will require you to pay for Smartphone data plan from now on).
N5 will switch to HSPA when LTE signal is too low. It tends to hold on to HSPA until LTE signal back to strong again. There is no need to reboot the phone (you can just toggle the airplane mode) but move to a location with better LTE signal.
Stop by an AT&T retail location. They will swap out the SIM for free and provision it for LTE. If LTE is not available in your area, it will switch to what's available.
If the LTE signal is low, like 1 bar, N5 seems to prefer fall back to HSPA. As mentioned, it is likely a software bug. You won't get back to LTE until your LTE signal is good enough.
Part of the issue could be the actual network itself.
The BSC (Base Station Controller) tells the handset what to register on and when to upgrade to higher standard or when to fall back to a lower standard.
It is possible that at&t has not fully provisioned it's network for "best service" for the N5 as they do not sell it.
So at&t branded handsets receive LTE priority while "grey" handsets may see lower network performance from time to time depending on network conditions.
Just a theory,
Dan
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