Verizon expanding 4G LTE footprint on July 21st

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Verizon Wireless announced on Tuesday that it will expand its 4G LTE network to cover several new markets on July 21st. The following areas will receive coverage at that time: Huntsville, Alabama.; Augusta, Georgia.; Scranton Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania.; Springfield, Massachusetts.; Raleigh-Durham, Greensboro-Winston, and Salem-High Point, North Carolina; and Knoxville, Tennessee. The carrier also said that it will expand the size of its current 4G LTE network in San Diego and Los Angeles. Read on for a press release describing Verizon’s California expansion.

Verizon Wireless Expands 4G LTE In Los Angeles And San Diego, California, On July 21

IRVINE, CA — Verizon Wireless is expanding the world’s first large-scale 4G Long Term Evolution (LTE) network in the Los Angeles and San Diego metro areas on July 21.  In the Los Angeles area, 4G LTE will expand from Pomona to Ontario, north to Rancho Cucamonga and Fontana, and stretch south to Corona.  Within San Diego county, new 4G LTE coverage will range north from Del Mar to Solana Beach, and north from Poway to Escondido.  Residents and travelers in Southern California using 4G LTE smartphones, laptop modems and hotspots will be able to take advantage of speeds up to 10 times faster than the company’s 3G network.

Currently, throughout greater Los Angeles, 4G LTE is available from Pasadena, east to Chino, south to San Clemente and northwest to Woodland Hills. In the San Diego area, 4G LTE coverage today extends from Del Mar to Poway in the east and south to Lakeside and Imperial Beach.

“We are proud to help lead more of Southern California into the 4G LTE wireless broadband world, helping residents, small businesses and local government connect faster and more fully with each other and those outside our community,” said Luis Cruz, regional president of Verizon Wireless. “Our 4G LTE network is revolutionizing the way people communicate, and we know this connectivity will be a key communications and technology enabler for many years to come.”

In real-world, fully-loaded network environments, 4G LTE users should experience average data rates of 5 to 12 megabits per second (Mbps) on the downlink and 2 to 5 Mbps on the uplink.  Verizon Wireless introduced the globe’s first large-scale LTE network on December 5, 2010, covering more than 110 million Americans, and is quickly expanding national coverage, currently offering service in 74 metropolitan areas, including Los Angeles and San Diego.  The company is rapidly building out its 4G LTE network, and is on course to deliver 4G LTE to its entire 3G wireless footprint by the end of 2013.

As the first wireless company in the world to broadly deploy game-changing 4G LTE technology, Verizon Wireless is committed to building its 4G network with the same performance and reliability for which it has long been recognized.  Verizon Wireless’ consistent focus on reliability is based on rigid engineering standards and a disciplined deployment approach year after year.  The company’s 700 MHz spectrum gives Verizon Wireless specific advantages with 4G, including a contiguous, nationwide network license.

Visit http://www.verizonwireless.com/lte for more information about Verizon Wireless’ 4G LTE network.

20 Comments
  • hemdroid

    BFD.  I wish they would work on getting signals to dead spots instead.

    • http://www.droiddoes.com/ iNorm

      Where are those on Verizon? I have a hard time finding them anywhere here in the Midwest.

      • Anonymous

        Their are entire towns in indiana that vzw doesn’t cover

      • http://twitter.com/outdoor_michael michael

        where is Indiana?

    • Warhed

      Vzw has probably the best coverage, if you live under a rock its not vzw fault that you don’t have coverage…

      • hemdroid

        It’s bad placement of towers.  A half mile up the street and I can get 3 bars.

      • tee

        Most cellco’s don’t own, or have very few towers. They’re at the mercy of wherever they are already built. They don’t seem to have any interest in changing this either.

        So it’s not vzw’s fault. And, depending on the quality of the phone you have, it can vary greatly.

      • Homer

        If they don’t have coverage in an area then they shouldn’t claim that they do… I can name 3 different frequently visited locations that have no service but Verizon’s map claim full service at each.

    • badfishie

      I never experience dead spots…must live in a cave. I travel the state and have yet to have issues.

    • Ping

      I agree. I have never got any service at my parent’s house just outside of Pittsburgh, PA because the towers are placed so horribly. AT&T gets good service. To be fair tho, Sprint is roming and Verizon overall is way way way better in the area.

  • Anonymous

    That’s great news but, what’s a crAppbook that can’t play flash content (anyway) got to do with 4G LTE???

    • Yabbadabba

      Nothing. You commenting on the wrong post with that one.

    • IPwn

      LOL MacBook’s have flash moron

  • Gcombs

    Its network 1st for Verizon. They are 100% focused when it comes to network upgrades. Just waiting for more 4G LTE devices to go with the network.

  • Anonymous

    you do understand that placement of towers is largely based on local government right and this is applicable to all carriers.

  • SG

    LOL  at  “Greensboro-Winston, and Salem-Highpoint”
    FYI BGR, “Winston-Salem” is a single city, not two different cities.  Maybe you should use slashes instead of dashes as not to be confused.  Greensboro/Winston-Salem/High Point

  • http://twitter.com/ggore Glenn Gore

    If you don’t live in one of the Top 50 metro areas of the U.S., you don’t matter.   Get over it and move!   Join the rest of those people jammed into the big cities with all the crime, traffic, and other fun stuff they “enjoy” on a daily basis.    Otherwise you will NEVER enjoy anything more than basic voice and text cellphone service.  You don’t deserve it anyway because you don’t live in the city.     

    All this is said with tongue firmly planted in cheek, but it’s exactly what you hear and read when you live outside one of these metro areas and complain that you don’t have cellphone service or that you don’t have access to 3G or 4G/LTE.  

    • Liqwidzero

      Ah, not really. Huntsville, AL is getting it, yes. But along WITH Huntsville, Athens is receiving LTE too, making it the first 4G network in my area. (All other carriers are WAAAAY behind, here. Not even T-Mobile 3G, here. No AT&T H+. No WiMax.) Verizon is on the ball, and they’re getting their stuff together and getting things done right and fast.

  • Homer

    After seeing VZW’s tiered data plans it pretty much renders their LTE network useless…

  • Jaimerocks726

    finally my home town of rancho mofoin’ cucamonga!! 909!!

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