EE first but Vodafone last in mobile phone tests

V_R

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EE has come out on top and Vodafone last in one of the UK's most comprehensive tests of mobile networks.
Mobile measurement firm RootMetrics conducted over 840,000 checks, ranking operators for reliability and speed of voice, data and text services.
While EE dominated for speed, Three was a close second in terms of reliability during last year's six-month study.
Vodafone said it could not "take the results of this report seriously and neither should our customers".
Evidence suggested some tests were "carried out in an inconsistent manner", it added in a statement.
O2 ranked second in the speed index, but its reliability score was lower than that of EE or Three in the tests.


'Not up to speed'

Each operator was rated out of 100 in a range of categories - overall performance, call performance, mobile internet, text, network reliability and network speed.
EE performed best across all categories, with Three second in terms of mobile internet, text services and network reliability.


Overall performance (out of 100)
  • EE - 84.6
  • Three - 73.5
  • O2 - 66.5
  • Vodafone - 52.4


O2 came second in the call performance and network speed categories.
Vodafone was last in all categories other than network speed, where it beat Three.
Average speeds for networks were not given because they ranged so vastly from area to area, RootMetrics said.
Neither did the study offer details about network coverage and mobile hotspots, although consumers can look at individual network performance at street level via its coverage map.
EE said the results showed it gave "customers everywhere in the UK the best mobile experience", partly because of its investment in new 4G services, greater 3G capacity and upgrades to 2G networks.
Three said the study was "carried out prior to our launch of 4G at no extra cost, so is not up to speed with our current performance".

Dropped calls

Rootmetric's tests saw data scientists cover a 23,000-mile area of the UK, including urban and rural locations, with 1,000 indoor tests.
They used off-the-shelf Android devices, which had the testing software installed on them.
EE was the first network in the UK to offer 4G
Rootmetric's Bill Moore said the aim of the testing was to get as close to a consumer experience as possible, across a range of metrics.
"It is all very well to test speeds, but if you can't get on the network then the speed becomes irrelevant," he told the BBC.
Futhermore, he said that while all networks faced the issue of dropped calls, it was a much bigger problem in the UK than in the US, where the firm has also been conducting tests.
"Networks here have a 2% failure rate compared to 0.5% in the US," he said.

Upgrade struggle

Matthew Howett, an analyst with research firm Ovum, said that EE's win in this particular study represented a return on huge recent investments in coverage.
"Clearly, EE scores very well and this reflects both their strategy of wanting to continue to be one step ahead with their network and the money they have put behind it," he said.
"While Vodafone doesn't score so well in comparison, they shouldn't be written off.
"They too have ambitious plans for network upgrades which are being delivered through 'Project Spring'. However, for the rest of the industry to close the gap on EE in terms of network speeds and availability, it is not going to be without a struggle."
Mr Howett added that consumers may want more detailed information from future surveys.
"I suspect many will be looking for this specifically broken out for 4G network performance as they are being enticed to upgrade by their operators," he said.
Communications regulator Ofcom is planning its own UK-wide mobile survey and will shortly publish quality of service information to help consumers compare the performance of mobile networks and to encourage providers to improve.
Full Story at the BBC

What do you think about this?

I have literally just ported from Vodafone to Three, and am very glad i did, VF's data speeds were shocking 99% of the time. 3 have been great so far, no issues with signal and some very impressive data speeds, and I've seen a 4G signal once or twice!

Their coverage map is also worth looking at....

http://webcoveragemap.rootmetrics.com/uk/
 
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I've only stayed with O2 as they offered me a good deal on my sim only contract.
But one reason i bought a sim free mobile last year was so i could change provider if i wanted to.
Will see what O2 want to charge me in September and then i may move.

EE do look like they are a company that wants to offer good coverage & service to customers.
 

V_R

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Always go SIM only. ;)

From what I've seeen while I was shopping around recently is this....

Vodafone has great coverage, but not great data coverage (3G, HSPA/HSPA+)
EE are the 4G leaders by a long way, but their packages are crap, 21 quid for 500Mb of data on a 4G tariff. lol no thanks.

3 are where its at if you want/need good data speeds consistently. Im paying £13 a month for unlimited data, including 4G, and texts and 200 mins, and its only a one month rolling contract. :)
 

floppybootstomp

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I'm with Virgin, who use EE. Sim only; 400 mins; unlimited texts; £6.49 pcm. That'll do me :)
 

Urmas

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I played with the interactive map a bit — central-ish London area, different operators — and I found the speeds to be... well, modest (I chose dark blue "faster" 4G areas). Here is what I get in Helsinki:

3370227341.png
 

V_R

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Get out. :mad: :lol:


I get anything from 8-20Mbs down and around 2Mb up on 3 via HSPA+, and saw 30Mb's down and 15 up via 4G.
 

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