Home Theater Forum › Home Theater Forum › Other Diversions › After Hours Lounge › Ideas on non-expiring pre-paid cell phones?
New Posts  All Forums:Forum Nav:

Ideas on non-expiring pre-paid cell phones?

post #1 of 27
Thread Starter 
I HATE cell phones.

I have a pre-paid cell phone that sits in my desk turned-off almost all year long. The only reason I own one is for emergencies, e.g. long-distance car trips.

The problem with Cingular is that the pre-paid minutes expire. After a couple of months, the phone goes dead, and I have to go into a Cingular store, pay a new activation charge, and then they give me a new and different phone number for it.

Are there any pre-paid cell phones where the pre-paid minutes are PERMANENT?
post #2 of 27

Re: Ideas on non-expiring pre-paid cell phones?

I don't know if they have them that are truely permanent; but most are better than what you describe.

My pay-as-you-go with T-Mobile has minutes that last for a set period of time (1 year, since I buy $100 at a time). But when they expire, if I buy any amount more (say $10) all the minutes extend for another set period of time (a year I think).
post #3 of 27

Re: Ideas on non-expiring pre-paid cell phones?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Al.Anderson
My pay-as-you-go with T-Mobile has minutes that last for a set period of time (1 year, since I buy $100 at a time). But when they expire, if I buy any amount more (say $10) all the minutes extend for another set period of time (a year I think).
You're right. I have a prepaid T-Mobile plan as well, and I go $100 at a time. Once you spend $100 on prepaid minutes, you become a Gold Member and your minutes will expire a year from your last purchase of minutes.
post #4 of 27

Re: Ideas on non-expiring pre-paid cell phones?

I use the same T Mobile prepaid plan that Al and Thomas have and it's an excellent deal for an emergency use phone. $100 buys 1000 minutes that are good for 12 months, and when your time is winding down T Mobile will send you a friendly reminder that the service needs to be renewed. At that point buying a $10 prepaid card will add a few more minutes to your balance plus it preserves what's left of your initial 1000 for another twelve months.

Although the service can be started with a smaller amount opening with $100 is your best deal. On it's own the minutes on a $10 card are only good for 30 days, but if you add $10 to an account that was opened with $100 30 days gets extended to 365.
post #5 of 27
Thread Starter 

Re: Ideas on non-expiring pre-paid cell phones?

T-Mobile isn't any better than Cingular....you buy a bloc for $100 that only puts off the inevitable for 12 months.

$100 only buys you a bloc that exists for 365 days...then DOO-DOO LAND. That's a flat-rate of $8 per month even with NO USE AT ALL.

I want to pay a "surcharge" of $100 and be permitted to use minutes FOREVER.
post #6 of 27

Re: Ideas on non-expiring pre-paid cell phones?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Dennis Nicholls
I want to pay a "surcharge" of $100 and be permitted to use minutes FOREVER.
I'm thinking the market for this is so small and offers little profit margin that no one has a plan for it. $100 for life? I seriously doubt any company offers that. I think I've heard about a phone for emergencies only; it'll just dial 911 and that's it, and service was $10/year or something like that.
post #7 of 27

Re: Ideas on non-expiring pre-paid cell phones?

Oh Dennis, I feel your pain, I would go this route too... I had ATT (when it was ATT Wireless) for a bit and it used to be 90 days and then it was changed to 60 and then 45... Arrgghhh...

If it is truly an emergency (911) phone, isn't any working cell phone supposed to be able to call 911 without an active plan, so long as its equivalent in wireless technology..i.e. CDMA, TDMA, GSM, etc?

Jay
post #8 of 27

Re: Ideas on non-expiring pre-paid cell phones?

TracFone minutes never expire, so long as you keep the phone active. So, it sounds like it is the closest to what you want. You pay a little under $100 for a year of service, which also includes somewhere around 400 minutes (depending on bonuses you might find) or you can buy fewer minutes with 2 months of service. So long as you never let the phone time expire, your minutes never expire.
post #9 of 27
Thread Starter 

Re: Ideas on non-expiring pre-paid cell phones?

Jay,
Yes, any cell phone should be able to call 911 whether or not it's activated. But many of my "emergencies" don't meet the criteria of an "emergency" to 911 operators....calling them for a flat-tire type of call is I believe a criminal offense.

Actually I'm probably going to just give up on the whole thing. So much of where I travel doesn't have cell phone coverage anyway. For example, the MAIN highway route between California and Idaho is highway 95 between Winnemucca (on interstate 80) and the outskirts of Boise. Your cell coverage drops off a few miles north of Winnemucca and doesn't start up again until you are almost in Boise - that's about 200 miles in the desert with no coverage.
post #10 of 27

Re: Ideas on non-expiring pre-paid cell phones?

I bought a car with OnStar last year (never have owned a cell phone though)..pretty cool. I don't think it uses celular technology.....sat stuff I think. They can run a vehicle diagnostic (basic anyway) if you've got a problem or call whatever service might be required. It has phone capabilities through Verizon. You buy a package of minutes that's good for a year and whatever isn't used is carried over to the following year if you buy a few more minutes. I may even try to call somebody one day.

Mort
post #11 of 27

Re: Ideas on non-expiring pre-paid cell phones?

Dennis, if you do find a thing like that, let me know cause i would do the same thing as you. My first cell phone was a prepaid phone and I never found a plan that didn't expire but at least I could buy like really inexpensive plans, like say $15 for 90 days or something like that and the option of renewal. Then they cut that to $15 every 60 days and then 45 days........

I am not sure if the satellite phones have limitations, I know you can get prepaid satellite plans... of course, satellite phones have a much higher initial cost than cellular...

Jay
post #12 of 27

Re: Ideas on non-expiring pre-paid cell phones?

I am in the same boat here. I hate Cell Phones - I think it might be the worst invention to mankind since disposable diapers.

However, I just got back from a 6 week road trip. During the trip my car died and I had to have it towed to have it fixed which took a few days. Not having a phone was a pain in the ass. I was lucky that it was in a major city instead of the middle of nowhere. People kept asking for my cell phone number and thought it was unthinkable that I didn't have one. Also, the pay phone is making its slow decline into oblivion. So it looks like I will have to get one whether I like it or not.

I had a cell phone when I lived in Kuwait - which was a necessity. You just bought the phone, the chip, and a prepaid card whenever you needed it. That was it. No contracts, daytime minutes, night time minutes, calling plans, etc. It was simple.

The T-Mobile thing looks like the way to go.

1. How much does a phone and chip cost?
2. Are there any other costs?
3. Does it have nationwide coverage?
4. Where can I buy one?

Sorry for the newbie questions. I have never had a phone in the US that my employer didn't pay for.
post #13 of 27

Re: Ideas on non-expiring pre-paid cell phones?

Quote:
I think it might be the worst invention to mankind since disposable diapers

Not even close. The gas powered leaf blower is far and away the worst invention - ever. (We tried the non-disposables. Lasted a week and we were back adding to the landfills.)

1. How much does a phone and chip cost?
I got my cheapest two for $39 each.

2. Are there any other costs?
I'm hazy on this. I don't think there was a start-up cost. But if there was it was cheap. No periodic cost though; except for re-initializing the minutes like we covered above.

3. Does it have nationwide coverage?
Yes. I haven't done an exhaustive check; but I believe it was nationwide and I've had no problems in DC, ColSprgs, Denver, and SanJose.

4. Where can I buy one?
I got my three at a T-Mobile store, Walmart, and Target. I would not recommend the T-Mobile store as they cost more and you get no more service. Actually, they lied to me, and refused to honor their adbertised price; but I won't go into that story.
post #14 of 27

Re: Ideas on non-expiring pre-paid cell phones?

I ditched my expensive Cingular monthly bill and got an el-cheapo Trac phone that serves it's purpose for a cheap solution for a mobile phone. I have never been happier. I don't understand the fascination of talking on a phone all the time.
post #15 of 27

Re: Ideas on non-expiring pre-paid cell phones?

Quote:
Originally Posted by London Lawson
I don't understand the fascination of talking on a phone all the time.
What's to understand? I'm sure there are a lot of people that don't understand posting on message boards all the time.
post #16 of 27

Re: Ideas on non-expiring pre-paid cell phones?

I saw that Target this week has T-Mobile products on sale - a phone, the $100 card, phone charger etc.

But then I saw where it is probably better to buy them off of the T-Mobile web site. I wonder if they would charge you sales tax. Shipping is free.

My primary concern in purchasing the phone would be how long the standby by time was. Then I thought I should get one with a camera in case I get into an accident or some other situation where I would need to take a picture. Then I thought being able to use it overseas would be cool. Their selection of pre-paid phones isn't that big.

I think that I might get this one:

http://www.t-mobile.com/shop/Phones/...5-aa5a72232ea0

Does anyone know about the Virgin Mobile pre-paid plans?
post #17 of 27

Re: Ideas on non-expiring pre-paid cell phones?

The Tmobile plan rocks, that's what I'm on. Although I use it for more than emergencies, I'm trying to limit myself to 4 $100 cards a year which is still cheaper than their cheapest subscription service. And I dont have a phone in my house either so there's no cost there. I have the Motorola Razr, which is quad band and to my knowledge could be used anywhere in the world with a local sim chip. Since I'm planning on doing some extensive travel next year this will come in handy. This one also has a basic camera in it too, and is very thin so I'd recommend it.
post #18 of 27

Re: Ideas on non-expiring pre-paid cell phones?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Mike Heenan
The Tmobile plan rocks, that's what I'm on. Although I use it for more than emergencies, I'm trying to limit myself to 4 $100 cards a year which is still cheaper than their cheapest subscription service. And I dont have a phone in my house either so there's no cost there. I have the Motorola Razr, which is quad band and to my knowledge could be used anywhere in the world with a local sim chip. Since I'm planning on doing some extensive travel next year this will come in handy. This one also has a basic camera in it too, and is very thin so I'd recommend it.

I noticed that target has a sale on T-Mobile pre-paid phones this week. Is this the phone you have? Is it a good buy?

Target Weekly Ad: Best deals at Target stores now. - Weekly Ad Flash Experience - Page 15

post #19 of 27

Re: Ideas on non-expiring pre-paid cell phones?

I have a RaZR v3 (Whatever that officially means). The sound quality is good, no complaints there with the speaker phone or regular handset but the ringer isn't that loud and the reception isn't good. I don't know if it's the phone or my provider (ATT) but I get crappy reception in my steel box of an office and I know others with Verizon and different phones get through fine. I also get crappy reception in the mountains whereas others may get an analog signal. (I'm guessing). Maybe AT&T is all digital which may explain the connection issues... I'm not a cell phone expert either.

Jay
post #20 of 27

Re: Ideas on non-expiring pre-paid cell phones?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Mort Corey
I bought a car with OnStar last year (never have owned a cell phone though)..pretty cool. I don't think it uses celular technology.....sat stuff I think. They can run a vehicle diagnostic (basic anyway) if you've got a problem or call whatever service might be required. It has phone capabilities through Verizon. You buy a package of minutes that's good for a year and whatever isn't used is carried over to the following year if you buy a few more minutes. I may even try to call somebody one day.

Mort

actually onstar uses verizon's networks for most of its capabilities.
post #21 of 27

Re: Ideas on non-expiring pre-paid cell phones?

Other ideas:

1) cell phone rental (not sure of costs)
2) Free service - Data phone capable of doing VoIP (most newer phones can do this). However, you'd need to be in a wifi area.
post #22 of 27
....resurrecting old thread...

I ended up buying the RAZR pre-paid phone from T-Mobile as a simple cell phone a year ago.  It has done the job well and certainly is inexpensive.  However, it has one Achilles heel: texting

Texting is key in the world of dating.  The basic numeric keypad just isn't cutting it.  I feel like I am in a horse and buggy while cars are zipping around me.

Therefore, I need another phone.  I am looking for help in what to buy.  My needs:

1.  Low Cost - For the moment I still don't use the phone that much.  I either need another pre-paid phone or something low cost without a contract.  I see the TV ads for MetroPCS where they have a low monthly unlimited voice, long distance, and text price [40$+ a month including taxes] without a contract.
2.  It must be small enough that it can fit into my jeans pocket.  The RAZR is good for this.  I don't know how guys can fit a giant Iphone in their pocket without it being uncomfortable.
3.  Decent battery life:  I don't want to be charging this thing all the time.

4.  Being able to text quickly.


Please let me know what suggestions you have.

post #23 of 27
I hate cell phones as well.  My wife and I both have them but we literally only call each other or if we're in the car and we need to call our destination, etc.

I called AT&T and had our cell plan ($80 a month for the two phones) converted to their Go Phone plan and charged up each phone with $100 credit - good for 1 year.  Each call is .25 a minute.

What's curious is that our cell bills said we used about 50 minutes a month each, which always seemed a little high to me.  On this pay as you go plan I'm not using my phone any less and I can clearly see how many minutes I'm using and in four months I've used about 60 minutes (or $15).

Even if I don't use the full $100 we're still ahead over $700 a year.
post #24 of 27

I have a Go Phone.  Buying $100 worth of credit gives you a gold membership, which means that from now on every you add minutes minutes to your account it gives you another year.  

 

If you still have credits when you enter your 12th month add $10 to your account.  That will give you another 12 months.

post #25 of 27

^^^ Is that true?  First I've heard of it, but, to be honest, finding information on GoPhone has been a little difficult. I just renewed mine but only for $25.  This means I would need to renew again in 3 months, which is fine, however right now I have just short of $100 credit on my phone as it is.  It'd be nice if I'm now good for the next year.

post #26 of 27

 

 

Quote:
I have a Go Phone.  Buying $100 worth of credit gives you a gold membership, which means that from now on every time you add minutes to your account it gives you another year.

 

That also applies to T-Mobile's pay-as-you-go plan.  Of course, that may all change when they get sucked up by AT&T.

post #27 of 27

I know that if you add $100 worth of credit to your account that it qualifies you for a gold membership.  I do not know if adding $25 to an account to an account which has $80 in reserve would give you a gold membership.  I doubt it, because AT&T is trying to tempt people to make large contributions to their accounts.

New Posts  All Forums:Forum Nav:
  Return Home
  Back to Forum: After Hours Lounge
Home Theater Forum › Home Theater Forum › Other Diversions › After Hours Lounge › Ideas on non-expiring pre-paid cell phones?