pontman
Casual Member
Hello!
We recently got a new EE mast near us, and the mobile reception has suddenly gone from non-existent to excellent (though not with any of the other networks). It looks like finally we have a decent alternative to our crappy rural ADSL.
i am currently trialing an EE 4G router, on a £50 / month deal with a 500GB cap, which is the biggest deal they'll do with a free modem. It's an 18 month contract.
I use this for work all day long, so there is a lot of data flowing up and down, plus kids watching TV and movies through it etc. So our family is hungry for data. We're already 293GB into our limit, only a few days in!
I'm looking around on their site, and wondering what's really to stop me using one of their SIM-only deals that has unlimited data for only £25/month on a one-year deal, and just buying my own router. I believe their terms say this is for "personal use" and a maximum of 12 devices etc., but how enforceable/enforced is this in practice?
Any experiences or advice?
We recently got a new EE mast near us, and the mobile reception has suddenly gone from non-existent to excellent (though not with any of the other networks). It looks like finally we have a decent alternative to our crappy rural ADSL.
i am currently trialing an EE 4G router, on a £50 / month deal with a 500GB cap, which is the biggest deal they'll do with a free modem. It's an 18 month contract.
I use this for work all day long, so there is a lot of data flowing up and down, plus kids watching TV and movies through it etc. So our family is hungry for data. We're already 293GB into our limit, only a few days in!
I'm looking around on their site, and wondering what's really to stop me using one of their SIM-only deals that has unlimited data for only £25/month on a one-year deal, and just buying my own router. I believe their terms say this is for "personal use" and a maximum of 12 devices etc., but how enforceable/enforced is this in practice?
Any experiences or advice?