GSM frequency bands or frequency ranges are the radio spectrum frequencies designated by the ITU for the operation of the GSM for mobile phones.
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There are fourteen bands defined in 3GPP TS 45.005, which succeeded 3GPP TS 05.05:
| System | Band | Uplink (MHz) | Downlink (MHz) | 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 each band and not its center frequency.
GSM-900 and GSM-1800 are used in most parts of the world: Europe, Middle East, Africa and most of Asia. In south Americas it is in Costa Rica (GSM-1800), Brazil (GSM-850, 900 and 1800), Guatemala (GSM-850, GSM-900 and 1900), El Salvador (GSM-850, GSM-900 and 1900).
GSM-850 and GSM-1900 are used in the United States, Canada, and many other countries in the Americas.
Another less common GSM version is GSM-450[2]. It uses the same band 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). GSM Association claims one of its around 680 operator-members has a license to operate a GSM450 network in Tanzania. However,currently all active public operators in Tanzania use GSM 900/1800 MHz.
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 band used in urban areas with 850 as a backup, and GSM-850 being the primary rural band. In the United States, regulatory requirements determine which area can use which band.
GSM-1900 and GSM-850 are also used in most of South and Central America, and both Ecuador and Panama use GSM-850 exclusively. Venezuela and Brazil use GSM-850 and GSM-900/1800 mixing the european and american bands. Some countries in the Americas use GSM-900 or GSM-1800, some others use 3, GSM-850/900/1900, GSM-850/1800/1900, GSM-900/1800/1900 or GSM-850/900/1800. Soon some countries will use GSM-850/900/1800/1900 MHZ like the Dominican Republic, Trinidad & Tobago and Venezuela.
In Brazil, the 1900MHz band is paired with 2100MHz to form the IMT-compliant 2100MHz band for 3G services.
The result is a mixture of usage in the Americas that requires travelers to confirm that the phones they have are compatible with the band of the networks at their destinations. 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:
Some countries in the Americas that use GSM-850:
Some countries in the Americas that use GSM-900:
Some countries in the Americas that use GSM-1800:
These lists are not exhaustive.
Today, most telephones support multiple bands as 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 bands, allowing for global use.
There are also multi-mode phones which can operate on GSM as well as on other mobile phone systems using other technical standards or proprietary technologies. 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.
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