JLMannin
02-13-09, 06:09 PM
This is my "ask Off Camber" day!
My wife's two-year old Razer V3m is acting all FUBAR lately. She will have a strong signal, say three of four bars, input a number, press send, and PRESTO, zero bars or even no service, a painfully long delay, and then a 50/50 chance of either call failed or the phone magically regaining signal strength and completing the call. Inbound calls are just fine, problem is just with outbound calls, and it does not matter where - home, work, car, etc.
Actually, we both have V3m phones, both with the same firmware and software and identical configurations, as far as I can tell. I called Verizon tech support last night and the lady I talked to had me do the usual stuff: disconnect the battery without turning off the phone, wait 10 seconds, put battery back, turn back on; repeat over the air programming (this was fun - during the reprogramming, the phone had max signal strength, then as soon as it was complete, poof, no service) She had me punch in some codes and read data to her, look up the software version, ect. Her final assessment was that I should take it to a Verizon wireless store and have the software updated, as "this can cause problems" she says. I explained that I was talking to her on an identical V3m with the same software and that my phone does not do this lost signal thing.
If getting the firmware updated will wipe the phone (I don't think it will), I might as well skip that part and just get the wife a new phone.
So, is this worth messing around with, or should I just get a new phone? She likes this one OK, but it is not like she has hundreds of contacts and many $$ worth of ring tones and apps on it either, so getting a new phone will not be all that painful for her (well, me, as I will be the one transferring all the contacts and stuff - she downloads all the techie stuff to me).
My wife's two-year old Razer V3m is acting all FUBAR lately. She will have a strong signal, say three of four bars, input a number, press send, and PRESTO, zero bars or even no service, a painfully long delay, and then a 50/50 chance of either call failed or the phone magically regaining signal strength and completing the call. Inbound calls are just fine, problem is just with outbound calls, and it does not matter where - home, work, car, etc.
Actually, we both have V3m phones, both with the same firmware and software and identical configurations, as far as I can tell. I called Verizon tech support last night and the lady I talked to had me do the usual stuff: disconnect the battery without turning off the phone, wait 10 seconds, put battery back, turn back on; repeat over the air programming (this was fun - during the reprogramming, the phone had max signal strength, then as soon as it was complete, poof, no service) She had me punch in some codes and read data to her, look up the software version, ect. Her final assessment was that I should take it to a Verizon wireless store and have the software updated, as "this can cause problems" she says. I explained that I was talking to her on an identical V3m with the same software and that my phone does not do this lost signal thing.
If getting the firmware updated will wipe the phone (I don't think it will), I might as well skip that part and just get the wife a new phone.
So, is this worth messing around with, or should I just get a new phone? She likes this one OK, but it is not like she has hundreds of contacts and many $$ worth of ring tones and apps on it either, so getting a new phone will not be all that painful for her (well, me, as I will be the one transferring all the contacts and stuff - she downloads all the techie stuff to me).