15-08-2022 03:31 PM
Hi all,
I am looking to buy a phone outright (I'm currently on a SIM only contract with EE) and I'm trying to identify phones on which I am likely to be able to use wifi calling.
I've done a search through other posts and it sounds like:
One of the complications is that I want to buy a phone with 256GB storage. One option is the Pixel 6, but EE only sells the 128GB version, is that likely to mean the 256GB version bought elsewhere won't work with wifi calling?
Really grateful for any help or your own experiences with this!
Solved! See the answer below or view the solution in context.
22-08-2022 10:20 AM
It used to be that Wi-Fi calling used network-specific protocols and required support in the network-branded firmware. For the past few years, however, it has been a standard protocol built right into Android itself, so with very few exceptions, support for this should be universal.
Some networks still brand the firmware in phones that they sell, so it is entirely conceivable that they would disable Wi-Fi calling on networks other than their own. The only way to get round that problem is to re-flash the phone with unbranded firmware, but that's a completely different discussion.
If you can be certain that a phone bought from Amazon is the genuine article (make sure it is sold by Amazon themselves, not a third-party seller using Amazon's platform to peddle Chinese knock-offs) then you shouldn't have any problem either.
15-08-2022 03:42 PM
Hi @tiazee
Ive purchased my mobiles direct from Samsung for years and never had any issues. (S22 Ultra at the moment)
The devices to avoid are those which were provided by other networks and are now unlocked.
Thanks
16-08-2022 03:11 PM
Hi @Northerner , thanks for your reply, that's reassuring.
Have you ever heard of people having problems with wifi calling with handsets bought from Amazon?
16-08-2022 06:35 PM
Hi @tiazee
As long as the firmware is the European version you shouldn't have any issues.
Thanks
22-08-2022 10:20 AM
It used to be that Wi-Fi calling used network-specific protocols and required support in the network-branded firmware. For the past few years, however, it has been a standard protocol built right into Android itself, so with very few exceptions, support for this should be universal.
Some networks still brand the firmware in phones that they sell, so it is entirely conceivable that they would disable Wi-Fi calling on networks other than their own. The only way to get round that problem is to re-flash the phone with unbranded firmware, but that's a completely different discussion.
If you can be certain that a phone bought from Amazon is the genuine article (make sure it is sold by Amazon themselves, not a third-party seller using Amazon's platform to peddle Chinese knock-offs) then you shouldn't have any problem either.
22-08-2022 06:04 PM
Really helpful summary of the general situation, I wish EE would put something like this on their own website! Thank you
22-08-2022 06:17 PM
No problem. Glad you found it helpful 🙂
23-08-2022 04:34 PM
BTW, this is the kind of phone you'll end up with if you buy from some unknown Chinese seller rather from Amazon themselves: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mofiQ7EGBH8