04-11-2024 11:02 - edited 04-11-2024 11:03
04-11-2024 11:02 - edited 04-11-2024 11:03
There's an area where I live that has poor signal for data in MK42. On the O2 Coverage and network checker it confirms I'm supposed to get 5G outdoors and 4G indoors but I don't even get 4G outdoors. It also states the following "Looks like a nearby phone mast isn’t working as it should, sorry. Our engineers will be on the case already, and your service might come and go until we fix it." It has been like this for months and I don't know who to contact for an update. I check it almost daily and there's never an update, just the same message. Can someone please get to the bottom of this and find out why this mast is not being fixed? I pay a decent amount of money for my mobile and it doesn't work as it should.
on 04-11-2024 11:06
yep. Searching the forum for an answer not a strong point these days, so here goes:
Guide: How can I sort out my network issues?
Guide: How to find help & contact O2
Guide: Do you have poor coverage / signal Indoors? This may help Explain / resolve it
and finally:
https://www.o2.co.uk/connectivity/wifi-and-4g-calling
Good luck, @GaryS87 - no cellular network promises 100% uptime 24/7/365.
on 04-11-2024 11:08
That post code does come up from.time to time.
Nobody in customer services will be able to give you an answer as they are never party to that information
04-11-2024 22:56 - edited 04-11-2024 22:59
04-11-2024 22:56 - edited 04-11-2024 22:59
@GaryS87 wrote:"Looks like a nearby phone mast isn’t working as it should, sorry. Our engineers will be on the case already, and your service might come and go until we fix it." It has been like this for months and I don't know who to contact for an update.
The vast majority of faults are rectified quite promptly, within a couple of days. Protracted fixes are often (but not always) down to third party issues.
There could be a legal issue with the site, a H&S problem that's preventing access. The fault might be with third party equipment and they might have issues too.
This list isn't exhaustive, but there's a whole catalogue of possibilities. Issues like this affect all networks from time-to-time, but if there's less site density in an affected area, that in turn gives fewer alternate overlapping sites to pick up the slack.
Specifically, mobile data uses the exact same network signal as voice calls - but VoLTE is prioritised above data. If one or more single sites are out-of-action in an area with poor density, then unless additional spectrum is added to the remaining sites (which is a whole other can of worms), then there's simply less capacity to go around. Slower data speeds are the natural consequence.