I finally was able to do that yesterday, and it turned out the sim card needed
replacing. Then I got it out to the card, and for some reason couldn't get a
data signal, but my 4G was working perfectly.
So we drove back to the sprint store, but the person who helped us wasn't
there anymore, an
I would physically take into the sprint store and show them what is going on.
This way, they can probably be able to better troubleshoot the issue as you can
reproduce the problem before hand. All you would do is simply show them what is
going on and they might be able to figure something out.
>
If you still have your old phone, try to take the old sim out of the old phone
and see if you have the same problem.
Sent from my iPhone.
Skype: graduater2004. Email and face time/iMessage:
ilovecountrymusic...@gmail.com
> On Dec 16, 2014, at 8:29 PM, Daniel Chavez wrote:
>
> I’d reset the p
Well unfortunately it seems to be doing it again, and can't figure out why. I
get service every time I reboot the phone; LTE comes up, then Sprint network,
then sim failier, then invalid sim.
The weird thing is, that when I called Sprint to find out what the deal was,
things stayed fine as lo
Hello,
When I went to the apple store to get a iPone 6 replaced, they moved the SIM
card from the old phone to the new phone. I then had to call into Sprint to
have the new phone activated. I am not really sure how SIM cards and CDMA
networks interact, though it might be that Sprint / Verizon
Good to hear. Though let’s hope it won’t become an ongoing problem.
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You probably don't have to go back and forth to the Sprint store and Apple
store as you are afraid you will have to do. If you call them, the carriers can
usually do a huge amount of work remotely and if the sim card is defective
could even send you a new sim card.
--
Cheryl
Go beyond the Ch
I fixed it, found out I just had to power it off and back on again.
On Dec 16, 2014, at 9:57 PM, Daniel Chavez wrote:
> Once the phone is activated you shouldn’t need to reactivate it.
> The sim, someone might need to change it out, I’d assume. It sounds like it
> may be defective but can’t say
Once the phone is activated you shouldn’t need to reactivate it.
The sim, someone might need to change it out, I’d assume. It sounds like it may
be defective but can’t say for sure.
I’d suggest someone test the sim that you have in another iPhone just in case,
to rule out defectiveness.
--
You
Ok, if I reset it, will I have to reactivate it all over again, and what to do
about the sim if it actually is defective?
On Dec 16, 2014, at 8:29 PM, Daniel Chavez wrote:
> I’d reset the phone to see.
> It’s also possible that the Sim they gave you was bad.
>
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I’d reset the phone to see.
It’s also possible that the Sim they gave you was bad.
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I just had to get my phone replaced due to my old one crapping out on me when I
tried to update to the latest version of IOS8, and had to purchase directly
through Apple, sense Sprint told me they couldn't send me a new one. So now
after I called to have it activated, they did the test call, an
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