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Huawea cube

Davali15

Member
Hi I have the huawea cube as a wifi router I had it in my previous holiday home but since moved to different area my network is 3 and I don't have a good reception now is it possible the replace the sim and still get all my devices linked up to my cube via WiFi
Thanks in Advance
 
Hi I have the huawea cube as a wifi router I had it in my previous holiday home but since moved to different area my network is 3 and I don't have a good reception now is it possible the replace the sim and still get all my devices linked up to my cube via WiFi
Thanks in Advance
Yes, that'll work fine. For most networks you can just swap out the SIM and the Huawei cube apply the correct settings etc. The WiFi and passwords etc. will remain the same.

If you're looking for better signal, try Vodafone first - they're generally pretty good and have cashback deals bringing the price in line similar to Three. Second best is EE, generally the fastest for internet but are a bit pricey.
 
Fair usage on EE is spastic though. Unreal amount of caps.
 
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I think there’s better ways you could describe that..
Here goes ;).
1. If you use 600GB of data (For personal plans) or 1TB of data (For buisness plans) they reserve the right to either A. Slow your speed to >5 Mbps as some people on here have said has happened B. Move you onto a business plan if you are on a personal C. Terminate your contract, the way in which this goes down is as follows: You will receive a phone call from EE explaining that your contract will be terminated as you have broken one of these rules. Shortly after your service will be cut off.
2. If you concurrently use more than 12 devices at once in a month, they will cancel your contract (In the way stated before).
3. They will only enforce these rules if you break them twice within a 6 month period. If only once you will be ok. I feel like this is the real life saver here if there's only one or two of you in your house and EE is your only option; if you have a big household (4+ people) then you will use quite a lot of data. For example our house of 4 burnt through 1.3TB of data in a month on our BT Landline.

Hope this helps :)
 
600GB ought to be enough for anyone. ;)

Jokes aside, I am well within this limit normally, but it's just 2 of us using it.
 
Here goes ;).
1. If you use 600GB of data (For personal plans) or 1TB of data (For buisness plans) they reserve the right to either A. Slow your speed to >5 Mbps as some people on here have said has happened B. Move you onto a business plan if you are on a personal C. Terminate your contract, the way in which this goes down is as follows: You will receive a phone call from EE explaining that your contract will be terminated as you have broken one of these rules. Shortly after your service will be cut off.
2. If you concurrently use more than 12 devices at once in a month, they will cancel your contract (In the way stated before).
3. They will only enforce these rules if you break them twice within a 6 month period. If only once you will be ok. I feel like this is the real life saver here if there's only one or two of you in your house and EE is your only option; if you have a big household (4+ people) then you will use quite a lot of data. For example our house of 4 burnt through 1.3TB of data in a month on our BT Landline.

Hope this helps :)
Out of interest, how did you obtain the detail in your description that doesn't appear explicitly in EE's FUP? (e.g. 2 offences in 6 months, etc?)

I have a "friend" who typically has 40+ devices connected and goes over 600GB every month but hasn't noticed any enforced speed limits or had any sanctions imposed by EE....
 
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I think it's a bit of a lottery. I have also gone over the limits, albeit only once and have the router in bridge mode and then a Linux box as a NAT router, so it's hard/impossible for them to detect how many devices are in my network.

I believe @Bubblesthefish6 heard this from a friend who was "caught".
 
I think it's a bit of a lottery. I have also gone over the limits, albeit only once and have the router in bridge mode and then a Linux box as a NAT router, so it's hard/impossible for them to detect how many devices are in my network.

I believe @Bubblesthefish6 heard this from a friend who was "caught".
Yup. As Lucian said tho, you can hide your devices behind a router connected to the CPE.
 
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