How To Unlock Your Phone

Posted on February 28th, 2007 by Jason

Now that the Copyright has given a green light your GSM or iDen phone, you can save money on a new phone – provided you can find it unlocked, or it yourself. Depending on your phone, you might be able do that by punching in a code, by buying a cable, or by sending it a professional unlocking service. This applies Cingular, T-Mobile and Nextel phones; Sprint, Verizon and Alltel subscribers are out of luck, for reasons I’ll explain below.

If you’ve had a T-Mobile phone for 90 days, or you’ve run out of time on a Cingular contract, you can get an unlocking code just by calling your carrier. Tell your carrier’s customer service representative that you’re traveling abroad and want use a foreign carrier’s SIM card. If they don’t give you the code, stick by your guns and ask for a manager.

If you don’t fulfill those requirements – say you’ve just bought a phone off of eBay and it turns out be locked, or you want use a phone locked a foreign carrier, or you want make a prepaid phone into postpaid – you have a bunch of different options.

If you have an older or more basic Nokia phone, including the 1100, 6230, 6820 or 7650, you can use a free, online calculator figure out your code. Check out the instructions at http://nokiafree.org/forums/t64045/s.html and then use the calculator at http://.nokiafree.org/ find the code.

Owners of a few GSM Pocket PC smart phones made by HTC – the Cingular 8125 and 8525, and T-Mobile MDA – can use another free tool, at http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=240784.

For most other phones, you have buy something, whether it’s software or a service. Many phones, including Sony Ericsson phones, Blackberries, some Treos, some LG phones and HTC smart phones can be unlocked with software and a special cable, according Alex Parkhomovich of CellCorner.com in Astoria, NY. Running the software taps into a remote database of unlocking codes and transmits the right code your phone. All told, expect spend $15-60 for the cable and/or the license one phone.

Many more recent phones either require modifications or aren’t unlockable at all, according Evan Silbert, president of Warlox Wireless (www.iunlock.com) in Boston. Silbert only does “postal unlocking” – you send him a phone, he unlocks it and sends it back you, charging around $25 for the service. Postal unlocking is the best bet for non-expert users, Silbert says, because he guarantees success and his experts won’t damage your phone.

On recent Motorola phones, that involves disassembling the phone, drilling into a shield over the main circuit board tap into the right contacts and kicking the phone into a special diagnostic mode get at the unlocking code. Recent Samsung phones can be unlocked with a software-only process, Silbert said.

If you’re really hard core, you can buy gadgets like the NsDongle for unlocking Samsung phones and the Smart Unlocker box for many Motorola phones from CellCorner. But that kind of unlocking costs $200 or more, so Parkhomovich suggests buying unlocking software or services instead, which cost $15-60 from him depending on the device.

Unfortunately, some very new phones can’t be unlocked at all. The hackers are working on it, but if you can’t find your phone on the lists at CellCorner, iUnlock, or other unlocking shops like TheFoneDoc.com and GSMLiberty.net, you may be out of luck.

Once your phone is unlocked and moved a different network, you’ll have reprogram the phone’s data settings so you can access the Web and send and receive picture messages. T-Mobile users can get their settings at http://tmobileus.wdsglobal.com/phonefirst; Cingular users should call 611 and ask have their MMS and WAP settings pushed their phone number.

The various unlocking services all different phones for different prices, so it’s worth shopping around find the best service and the best deal. HowardForums has a good list of unlocking shops (http://www.howardforums.com/forumdisplay.php?f=63).

No Love For CDMA

All of this only affects GSM and iDen phones – in other words, Cingular, T-Mobile, Nextel, and Boost phones. CDMA phones, used by Sprint, Verizon, Virgin Mobile, Amp’d, Helio and Alltel, have more security, according Ron Piazza, a communications specialist for Valley Tel Service in Eugene, OR.

CDMA phones both have handset locks and have be individually authenticated by their network. So even if you a CDMA phone, if it isn’t on the serial number list of the network you’re bringing it , it won’t work. And the carriers won’t add individual new serial numbers their databases.

Representatives of Sprint and Alltel said that banning other carriers’ phones protects the user-experience on their networks. “We think it’s important optimize the customer experience by making sure all of the handsets on our network are optimized for it,” said Sprint spokesman Travis Sowders.

That’s corporate doublespeak, some extent. Even though Sprint, Verizon, and Alltel all sell Motorola V3m phones, for instance, they won’t activate each other’s V3m’s. And although carriers individuals can “flash” CDMA phones with the software sets from other carriers. The carriers just choose not .

Piazza said he used be able activate various phones on Verizon’s and Alltel’s networks. But both carriers have cracked down recently. Verizon, Alltel, and Sprint all say they absolutely will not activate any phone that isn’t already in their database.

A few hackers can get around that by copying an approved serial number into a phone, Piazza says. Unfortunately, that’s against the law – not the DMCA, it’s against a 1997 law that specifically forbids “cloning” phones. Like many wireless users, Piazza finds that frustrating.

“You’re buying a product, not leasing the product. After you fulfill your [contract] agreement and the phone is yours, why should that phone be useless you? Why should it be locked a specific provider?” he asks

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2 Responses to “How To Unlock Your Phone”

  1. Chase on 03 Apr 2007 at 2:36 pm #

    I totally agree with the last statement made,
    “You’re buying a product, not leasing the product. After you fulfill your [contract] agreement and the phone is yours, why should that phone be useless to you? Why should it be locked to a specific provider?â€
    Why does it feel like you are marrying the company instead of buying the product. I have never unlocked a phone but I think the concept of using the same phone on multiple networks should be possible for everyone. It should not be such a hassle especially when most companies have alot of the same phones. It sucks and its not right.

  2. G.R. on 20 Feb 2008 at 4:31 pm #

    My wife recently had damage to her phone on the carrier she is with now , NTELOS. Of course we were not far enough in the contract to renew to get a new phone at a discounted price & refused to pay full price. Long story short, my wife recieved a phone from a friend that was used for the Verizon network (Razr V3) We took the phone to the store & the clerk charged us $20 to activate - no questions asked & activated the phone immediately. I must add the phone works just fine. I guess it all depends on the day.

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