GSM FREQUENCY BANDS

(Redirected from GSM-1900)

'GSM frequency bands' or frequency ranges are the radio spectrum frequencies designated by the ITU for the operation of the GSM system for mobile phones.

Contents
GSM frequency bands
GSM-900 and GSM-1800
GSM-850
GSM-1900
GSM-400
GSM frequency usage in the Americas
Multi-band and multi-mode phones
See also
External links

GSM frequency bands


There are fourteen frequency bands defined in 3GPP TS 45.005, which succeeded 3GPP TS 05.05:
System Band Uplink Downlink Channel Number
T-GSM 380 380 380.2 - 389.8 390.2 - 399.8 Dynamic
T-GSM 410 410 410.2 - 419.8 420.2 - 429.8 Dynamic
GSM 450 450 450.4 - 457.6 460.4 - 467.6 259 - 293
GSM 480 480 478.8 - 486.0 488.8 - 496.0 306 - 340
GSM 710 710 698.0 - 716.0 728.0 - 746.0 Dynamic
GSM 750 750 747.0 - 762.0 777.0 - 792.0 438 - 511
T-GSM 810 810 806.0 - 821.0 851.0 - 866.0 Dynamic
GSM 850 850 824.0 - 849.0 869.0 - 894.0 128 - 251
P-GSM 900 900 890.0 - 915.0 935.0 - 960.0 1 - 124
E-GSM 900 900 880.0 - 915.0 925.0 - 960.0 975 - 1023, 0-124
R-GSM 900 900 876.0 - 915.0 921.0 - 960.0 955 - 1023, 0-124
T-GSM 900 900 870.4 - 876.0 915.4 - 921.0 Dynamic
DCS 1800 1800 1710.0 - 1785.0 1805.0 - 1880.0 512 - 885
PCS 1900 1900 1850.0 - 1910.0 1930.0 - 1990.0 512 - 810

Note: The table shows the extents of the band and not center frequency.

★ P-GSM, Standard or primary GSM 900 Band

★ E-GSM, Extended GSM 900 Band (includes Standard GSM 900 band)

★ R-GSM, Railways GSM 900 Band (includes Standard and Extended GSM 900 band)

★ T-GSM, TETRA-GSM
GSM-900 and GSM-1800

GSM-900 and GSM-1800 are used in most parts of the world: Europe, Brazil (GSM-850 and 1800), Middle East, Africa and most of Asia.

★ GSM-900 uses 890 - 915 MHz to send information from the Mobile Station to the Base Transceiver Station (uplink) and 935 - 960 MHz for the other direction (downlink), providing 124 RF channels (channel numbers 1 to 124) spaced at 200 kHz. Duplex spacing of 45 MHz is used.
:In some countries the GSM-900 band has been extended to cover a larger frequency range. This 'extended GSM', E-GSM, uses frequency range 880 - 915 MHz (uplink) and 925 - 960 MHz (downlink), adding 50 channels (channel numbers 975 to 1023 and 0) to the original GSM-900 band. The GSM specifications also describe 'railways GSM', GSM-R, which uses frequency range 876 - 915 MHz (uplink) and 921 - 960 MHz (downlink). Channel numbers 955 to 1023. GSM-R provides additional channels and specialized services for use by railway personnel.
:All these variants are included in the GSM-900 specification.

★ GSM-1800 uses 1710 - 1785 MHz to send information from the Mobile Station to the Base Transceiver Station (uplink) and 1805 - 1880 MHz for the other direction (downlink), providing 374 channels (channel numbers 512 to 885). Duplex spacing is 95 MHz.
:GSM-1800 is also called PCS in Hong Kong and the United Kingdom.
GSM-850

GSM-850 and GSM-1900 are used in the United States, Canada, and many other countries in the Americas. GSM-850 is also sometimes erroneously called GSM-800.
In Australia, GSM 850 is allocated to a CDMA network operated by Telstra that is being phased over to a 3GPP W-CDMA based network called NextG. The NextG Network is based on the 3GPP standard except operates on the 850 MHz spectrum. As it operates on a lower frequency compared to other 3G implementations, it has a longer range.

★ GSM-850 uses 824 - 849 MHz to send information from the Mobile Station to the Base Transceiver Station (uplink) and 869 - 894 MHz for the other direction (downlink). Channel numbers 128 to 251.
Cellular is the term used to describe the 850 MHz band, as the original analog cellular mobile communication system was allocated in this spectrum. Providers commonly operate in one or both frequency ranges.
GSM-1900

GSM-850 and GSM-1900 are used in the United States, Canada, and many other countries in the Americas.

★ GSM-1900 uses 1850 - 1910 MHz to send information from the Mobile Station to the Base Transceiver Station (uplink) and 1930 - 1990 MHz for the other direction (downlink). Channel numbers 512 to 810.
PCS is an initialism for Personal Communications Service and merely represents the original name in North America for the 1900 MHz band.
GSM-400

Another less common GSM version is GSM-400. It uses the same frequency as and can co-exist with old analog NMT systems. NMT is a first generation (1G) mobile phone system which was primarily used in Nordic countries, Eastern Europe and Russia prior to the introduction of GSM. It operates in either 450.4 - 457.6 MHz paired with 460.4 - 467.6 MHz (channel numbers 259 to 293), or 478.8 - 486 MHz paired with 488.8 - 496 MHz (channel numbers 306 to 340).
There is currently one GSM-400 network in Tanzania

GSM frequency usage in the Americas


In North America, GSM operates on the primary mobile communication bands - 850 MHz and 1900 MHz. Initial implementations were exclusively 1900 MHz, with 850 MHz being added in 2001. In Canada, GSM-1900 is the primary frequency used in urban areas with 850 as a backup, and GSM-850 being the primary rural frequency. In the United States, regulatory requirements determine which area can use which frequency.
GSM-1900 and GSM-850 are also used in parts of South and Central America, and both Ecuador and Panama use GSM-850 exclusively. Some countries in the Americas use GSM-900 or GSM-1800.
The result is a mixture of usage in the Americas that requires travelers to confirm that the phone they have is compatible with the frequency of the network at their destination. Frequency-compatibility problems can be avoided through the use of multi-band, tri-band, or especially quad band, phones.
Some countries in the Americas that use GSM-1900 phones:

Antigua

Argentina

Bahamas

Barbados

Belize

Bermuda

British Virgin Islands

Bolivia

Canada

Chile

Colombia

Dominican Republic

El Salvador

Honduras

Guatemala

Jamaica

Mexico

Nicaragua

Paraguay

Peru

Puerto Rico

Trinidad and Tobago

United States

Uruguay

U.S. Virgin Islands
Some countries in the Americas that use GSM-850 phones:

Anguilla

Antigua

Argentina

Bolivia

Brazil

Canada

Colombia

Dominican Republic

Ecuador

El Salvador

Grenada

Guatemala

Haiti

Honduras

Nicaragua

Panama

Ecuador

Montserrat

Peru

Trinidad & Tobago

United States

Uruguay

Turks and Caicos Islands

Venezuela
Some countries in the Americas that use GSM-900 phones:

Antigua

Barbados

Brazil

British Virgin Islands

Cuba

El Salvador

Falkland Islands

French Guiana

Grenada

Guatemala

Jamaica

St. Pierre and Miquelon Islands

Suriname

Venezuela
Some countries in the Americas that use GSM-1800 phones:

Barbados

Brazil

Dominican Republic

Costa Rica

Grenada

Jamaica

Trinidad & Tobago

Uruguay
These lists are not exhaustive.

Multi-band and multi-mode phones


Today, most telephones support multiple frequencies used in different countries. These are typically referred to as multi band phones. Dual band phones can cover GSM networks in pairs such as 900 and 1800 MHz frequencies (Europe, Asia, Australia and Brazil) or 850 and 1900 (North America and Brazil). European tri band phones typically cover the 900, 1800 and 1900 bands giving good coverage in Europe and allowing limited use in North America, while North American tri-band phones utilize 850, 1800 and 1900 for wide-spread North American service but limited world-wide use. A new addition has been the quad band phone, supporting all four major GSM frequency groups, allowing for widespread usage globally, including in North America.
There are also multi-mode phones which can operate on GSM systems as well as on mobile-phone systems using other technical standards. Often these phones use multiple frequency bands as well. For example, one version of the Nokia 6340i GAIT phone sold in North America can operate on GSM-1900, GSM-850 and legacy TDMA-1900, TDMA-800, and AMPS-800, making it both multi-mode and multi-band.

See also



3GPP

Cellular frequencies

Dual band

Quad band

Roaming

Tri band

UMTS frequency bands

700 Mhz wireless spectrum auction

External links



GSM Coverage Maps and Roaming Information GSM World's listing of countries, frequencies, and roaming agreements.

coveragemaps.com - Publications - Current Coverage Maps Charts of GSM/3GSM coverage and frequency usage for the world, Europe, Asia and the Americas

3GPP Specification detail TS 05.05 Specification 3GPP TS 05.05 Radio Transmission and Reception

3GPP Specification detail TS 45.005 Specification 3GPP TS 45.005 Radio Transmission and Reception

3GPP Specifications for group: R4 - Frequencies info for UMTS (TS 25.101/102/104/105)

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