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Wednesday, 2020-Nov-18 — User Guides for Loxcel Cellular Services

These short user guides will help you to get the most out of Canada, Australia or New Zealand Cellular Services:

Tuesday, 2020-Nov-17 — November SMS Snapshot — Thousands more Telus sites

The spike in the bottom-left green graph represents 505 new Telus macro and metrocell sites. These graphs do not include DAS sites; if they did, that graph would have rocketed by 3,300 sites to reach a new record of 14,446 Telus sites.

If you are connecting a mobile signal booster or IoT device, remember that roughly half of the Telus cellular network consists of DAS and metrocell sites, which cover an area too small to meet your needs. We have tools to help you sort this out.

Channel Counts
Rogers, Telus, Bell channel count graph for past 18 months
Channel Counts
Freedom, Videotron, SaskTel, Eastlink channel count graph for past 18 months

Occupied Spectrum (GHz)
Rogers, Telus, Bell occupied spectrum graph for past 18 months
Occupied Spectrum (GHz)
Freedom, Videotron, SaskTel, Eastlink occupied spectrum graph for past 18 months

Site Counts
Rogers, Telus, Bell site count graph for past 18 months
Site Counts
Freedom, Videotron, SaskTel, Eastlink site count graph for past 18 months

Monday, 2020-Nov-16 — Australia 5G — Telstra 4,191, Optus 1,178

Look here for the most recent 5G statistics.

You can see Telstra or Optus 5G sites, Telstra IoT and more at Australia Cellular Services.

Thursday, 2020-Jun-4 — June SMS Snapshot — 18 new Rogers 5G Sites

This month saw no changes for Telus, 200 fewer channels for Bell and 53 more sites for Rogers, including 18 with 5G for a total of 490.

The graphs below show that channel counts, occupied spectrum and site counts have remained stable across all seven carriers for the past few months. This is good news. The only exception is a small matter, and relates to the SMS Spectrum Licences Site Data file itself, which has about 220,000 identical records.

Channel Counts
Rogers, Telus, Bell channel count graph for past 18 months
Channel Counts
Freedom, Videotron, SaskTel, Eastlink channel count graph for past 18 months

Occupied Spectrum (GHz)
Rogers, Telus, Bell occupied spectrum graph for past 18 months
Occupied Spectrum (GHz)
Freedom, Videotron, SaskTel, Eastlink occupied spectrum graph for past 18 months

Site Counts
Rogers, Telus, Bell site count graph for past 18 months
Site Counts
Freedom, Videotron, SaskTel, Eastlink site count graph for past 18 months

Wednesday, 2020-Jun-3 — Fresnel Zone & Line-of-sight

This friendly 90 second tutorial discusses the importance of the Fresnel Zone & Line-of-sight to wireless link planning.

Loxcel Cellular Services provides simple yet powerful tools to help you with all this, and more.

Please contact us for more information.


Tuesday, 2020-Jun-2 — Close Any Popup Window

You can now close any pop-up window by clicking the shaded background, identfied by the green checkmarks:

Site info pop-up showing where to click to close it.
Find best pop-up showing where to click to close it.

This method also works with the Account & Subscription Info pop-up.

Friday, 2020-May-29 — Antenna Model Cleanup

The new Export KML feature works best with accurate channel antenna information. To that end, we cleaned up most of the antenna model information provided by Canadian licensees to ISED:

 Channels
LicenseeTotalCleaned% Cleaned
Bell383,489347,64490.7%
Telus234,305207,50688.6%
Rogers127,16589,21670.2%
Freedom24,51620,95385.5%
 Channels
LicenseeTotalCleaned% Cleaned
Videotron7,5695,63674.5%
Eastlink6,2535,15182.4%
Xplore6,0225,00583.1%
MCSNet1,2441,244100.0%

(Channel counts for Bell and Telus include many duplicates.)

This cleanup offered additional benefits:

Wednesday, 2020-May-27 — SaskTel fusion, TekSavvy SkyFi and Hydro Quebec

We'd like to welcome these three Canadian licensees to Loxcel Cellular / Broadband Services:

LicenseeServiceCoverage# Sites
SaskTel fusionBroadbandSaskatchewan109
TekSavvy SkyFiBroadbandSouth-west Ontario20
Hydro-QuebecProprietaryQuebec667

SaskTel fusion and TekSavvy SkyFi are accessible to our Broadband service subscribers. Please contact us for information.

Monday, 2020-May-25 — Export Multiple KML Sites (Detailed 3-D or Pushpin)

Loxcel Cellular Services can now export multiple cellular and fixed wireless sites to one Google Earth KML file. The video at the right captures a flyby through one of these KML files. It shows

Each site appears as a simple monopole, which simplifies the depiction of its antenna layout.

The Places panel below provides detailed technical information about each site, as well as the means to "fly" to a site or zoom in on its antenna panels.


Account info showing Simple pushpins option to export KML file

The hollow arrow points at the monopole, and shows structure height (16m), total channel count (66), tenants (Rogers, Telus) and site code (W5064). Double click this row to view the entire site in the 3D viewer. The green arrow points at a Telus panel 16m above ground, 30° azimuth, no tilt and Tx 743-2150MHz. Double click this row to fly to its panel. The red arrow points at a Rogers panel 14m above ground, 110° azimuth, 6° tilt and Tx 735-1972MHz.

We created the video above by clicking on selected monopoles and antenna panels.


To create your own KML file, expand the control panel, center the map over the sites of interest, and click Export KML. The right arrow points to a counter of how many sites will be exported. Table 1 lists how many sites you can export.

Control panel showing blue Export KML button

Table 1: Export KML Quotas
SubscriptionDetailed 3-DSimple pushpin
24 Hour5 sites25 sites
3 Month10 sites50 sites
6 Month50 sites250 sites
12 Month100 sites500 sites
Table 2: Product Compatibility
VersionCompatible?Notes
Google Earth Pro on desktopYesDisable 3D Buildings
Google Earth on mobileYesTested on iPhone 8 and iPad Pro
Google Earth on webNoVersion lacks key features
Google Earth VRNoVersion cannot load a KML file

Google Earth's 3D Buildings layer adds perspective and photorealism to the 3D viewer. However, it also will clutter and obscure your view of the monopoles and antenna panels.

To remove this clutter, toggle the 3D Buildings checkbox from inside the Layers panel at the bottom-left corner of the Google Earth window, below the Places panel.

As the video above shows, disabling 3D Buildings makes the monopoles and antenna panels more visible and much easier to see.

The KML file will open in Google Earth as long as your subscription has not expired. The KML file will continue to work after your subscription has expired, until you close Google Earth.

A KML file becomes "stale" whenever our wireless site database is updated. This happens every few days. Google Earth can open a stale KML file and populate the Places panel with site addresses and technical information, but will not update the 3D viewer. If this happens, sign in to Loxcel Cellular Services and export another KML file, which will include the most recent updates.

Mangled Tower Clutter
Google Earth '3D Buildings' interfering with the display of KML rendered site
Building Clutter
Google Earth '3D Buildings' interfering with the display of KML rendered site

The Export KML button can export a site with detailed 3D antenna panels (as shown in the video) or as a simple pushpin. To choose one, click the blue Account button to display the Account & Subscription Info pop-up. Then, make your selection next to Export KML Type. Your subscription quota shows on the line below. A warning will appear if you attempt to export beyond this quota.

For the Simple pushpin export type, when a pushpin is clicked, a window opens to show structure height and channel count. The Simple pushpin export type receives a higher export quota than Detailed 3-D antenna panels, as outlined in Table 1 above.

Account info showing Simple pushpins option to export KML file

Wednesday, 2020-Apr-15 — Growth & Distribution of Rogers 5G Network

Table 1: Rogers 5G Site Counts
RegionNov-19Dec-19Mar-20Apr-20
Vancouver598888127
Southern Ontario14685162183
Ottawa00432
Montreal00041
Quebec City0005
TOTAL144234254388

Rogers 5G comprises 2.2% of their Total Bandwidth, a percentage expected to increase as 5G service deploys beyond BRS 2500MHz and into other bands.

The following maps show the current distribution of Rogers 5G sites across Canada:

Map 1: Vancouver (127 sites)
Graph of Rogers 5G sites in Vancouver
Map 3: Ottawa (32 sites)
Graph of Rogers 5G sites in Ottawa
Map 5: Quebec City (5 sites)
Graph of Rogers 5G sites in Quebec City
Map 2: Southern Ontario (183 sites)
Graph of Rogers 5G sites in Southern Ontario
Map 4: Montreal (41 sites)
Graph of Rogers 5G sites in Montreal

Tuesday, 2020-Apr-14 — April SMS Snapshot — More Rogers 5G

The typical SMS snapshot contain 600,000 records, of which 10 - 15% are duplicates. This month's snapshot contains 982,408 records, the excess coming primarily from 364,058 additional records for Bell Mobility Inc. Most of these additional records are duplicates across every field, which we deleted before continuing with our analysis below.

Compared to last month, April brings

Although not shown below, from March to April, Xplore increased both

Figure 1: Channel Counts — Rogers, Telus, Bell
Graph of Canadian channel counts for Rogers, Telus, Bell from Jan 2017 to Apr 2020
Figure 2: Total Bandwidth (GHz) — Rogers, Telus, Bell
Graph of Canadian spectrum capacity for Rogers, Telus, Bell from Jan 2017 to Apr 2020
Figure 3: Site Counts — Rogers, Telus, Bell
Graph of Canadian site counts for Rogers, Telus, Bell from Jan 2017 to Apr 2020
Figure 4: Channel Counts — Freedom, Videotron, SaskTel, Eastlink
Graph of Canadian channel counts for Freedom, Videotron, SaskTel, Eastlink from Oct 2017 to Apr 2020
Figure 5: Total Bandwidth (GHz) — Freedom, Videotron, SaskTel, Eastlink
Graph of Canadian spectrum capacity for Freedom, Videotron, SaskTel, Eastlink from Jan 2017 to Apr 2020
Figure 6: Site Counts — Freedom, Videotron, SaskTel, Eastlink
Graph of Canadian site counts for Freedom, Videotron, SaskTel, Eastlink from Oct 2017 to Apr 2020

We monitor SMS snapshots and supplement with proprietary and 3rd party data so that Canada Cellular Services provides the most accurate representation available of Canada's wireless landscape.

Tuesday, 2020-Mar-31 — Total Bandwidth

Canada, Australia and New Zealand Cellular Services use data sourced from ISED (Canada), ACMA (Australia) and NZRSM (New Zealand). We manage the quality of this data by closely tracking site and channel counts, and apply corrections as needed.

Starting this month, we're tracking a third metric: Total Bandwidth, the sum of all channel bandwidths with unique transmit frequency and horizontal azimuth. This metric is more accurate than channel counts at measuring the capacity of a wireless network, as it is not bias by the presence of duplicate channel records, common to varying degrees among most carriers.

For an example, Figure 1 shows a large spike of 221,056 Telus channels on March 2018. However, Figure 2 remained flat on March 2018, suggesting this spike represents duplicate channel records in the SMS snapshot — and not additional network capacity.

Figure 1: Channel Counts — Rogers, Telus, Bell
Graph of Canadian channel counts for Rogers, Telus, Bell from Jan 2017 to Mar 2020
Figure 2: Total Bandwidth (GHz) — Rogers, Telus, Bell
Graph of Canadian total bandwidth for Rogers, Telus, Bell from Jan 2017 to Mar 2020
Figure 3: Site Counts — Rogers, Telus, Bell
Graph of Canadian site counts for Rogers, Telus, Bell from Jan 2017 to Mar 2020
Figure 4: Channel Counts — Freedom, Videotron, SaskTel, Eastlink
Graph of Canadian channel counts for Freedom, Videotron, SaskTel, Eastlink from Oct 2017 to Mar 2020
Figure 5: Total Bandwidth (GHz) — Freedom, Videotron, SaskTel, Eastlink
Graph of Canadian total bandwidth for Freedom, Videotron, SaskTel, Eastlink from Jan 2017 to Mar 2020
Figure 6: Site Counts — Freedom, Videotron, SaskTel, Eastlink
Graph of Canadian site counts for Freedom, Videotron, SaskTel, Eastlink from Oct 2017 to Mar 2020

Table 1 shows how we calculate Total Bandwidth. The six channels were taken verbatim from the SMS snapshot dated 2020-03-04. All have the same 130° horizontal azimuth. All report the same 15MHz bandwidth (Tx High - Tx Low). Channels are grouped by horizontal azimuth. For each group, channels with identical Tx frequency range (# 2, 3, 5 & 6) are discarded, and channels with overlapping Tx frequency range (# 4) have their overlapping portion removed.

The result: 15MHz @ 2142.5 - 2157.5MHz plus 7.5MHz @ 2157.5 - 2165.0MHz equals 22.5MHz total bandwidth.

Table 1: Telus Site @ 49.277, -123.112 (BCE Place)
 Ant.HorizTxTxTotal
#HeightAzimuthLowHighBandwidth
161m130°2142.52157.515.0
261m130°2142.52157.5 
365m130°2142.52157.5 
461m130°2150.02165.07.5
561m130°2150.02165.0 
665m130°2150.02165.0 
SUM:22.5

Table 2 shows the difference in Total Bandwidth if duplicate and overlapping channels, as described above in Table 1, were not removed. Telus' 32.9% is caused by many duplicate channel records in the SMS snapshot.

Table 2: Total Bandwidth Over-reporting
 Total Bandwidth (GHz) 
CarrierWith DupsNo DupsDifferencePercent
Rogers1,057.81,048.98.860.8%
Telus2,233.01,498.8734.1432.9%
Bell1,006.8983.723.182.3%
Freedom169.7169.30.480.3%
Videotron70.865.15.718.1%
SaskTel53.052.90.080.2%
Eastlink29.327.02.317.9%

The chaotic graphs in Figures 1 - 6 and the over-reporting of total bandwidth in Table 2 raise this question: is Total Bandwidth a valid metric? To answer, examine Figures 7 - 9, which are the equivalent graphs for Australia, a country of comparable size to Canada:

Figure 7: Channel Counts — Telstra, Optus, Vodafone
Graph of Australian channel counts for Telstra, Optus and Vodafone from Jan 2017 to Mar 2020
Figure 8: Total Bandwidth (GHz) — Telstra, Optus, Vodafone
Graph of Australian spectrum capacity for Telstra, Optus and Vodafone from Jan 2017 to Mar 2020
Figure 9: Site Counts — Telstra, Optus, Vodafone
Graph of Australian site counts for Telstra, Optus and Vodafone from Jan 2017 to Mar 2020

And Figures 10 - 12 show the same for New Zealand:

Figure 10: Channel Counts — Vodafone, Spark, 2degrees
Graph of New Zealand channel counts for Vodafone, Spark and 2degrees from Jan 2017 to Mar 2020
Figure 11: Total Bandwidth (GHz) — Vodafone, Spark, 2degrees
Graph of New Zealand spectrum capacity for Vodafone, Spark and 2degrees from Jan 2017 to Mar 2020
Figure 12: Site Counts — Vodafone, Spark, 2degrees
Graph of New Zealand site counts for Vodafone, Spark and 2degrees from Jan 2017 to Mar 2020

Table 3 shows minimal over-reporting of Total Bandwidth for carriers across Australia and New Zealand:

Table 3: Total Bandwidth Over-reporting
 Total Bandwidth (GHz)
CarrierWith DupsNo DupsDifferencePercent
Telstra1,839.71,744.495.365.2%
Optus2,339.02,301.037.951.6%
Vodafone (AU)877.6818.958.706.7%
Vodafone (NZ)113.9113.60.270.2%
Spark129.0128.80.200.2%
2degrees55.755.60.070.1%

Figures 8 and 11 show steady and accurate growth of Total Bandwidth across all carriers in Australia and New Zealand, and Table 3 reports minimal over-reporting — suggesting Total Bandwidth is a relevant and helpful metric to measure the capacity and growth of a nation's wireless network. The chaos pictured in Figures 1 - 6 and over reporting captured in Table 2 suggest data issues with Canada's SMS snapshots, especially for Telus and Freedom.

We monitor SMS snapshots and supplement with proprietary and 3rd party data so that Canada Cellular Services provides the most accurate representation available of Canada's wireless landscape.

Friday, 2020-Mar-27 — Australia 5G — Telstra 1,579, Optus 1,101, Vodafone 86 Sites

This table shows the monthly growth of Telstra's 5G network across Australia, starting in May 2019:

 # Telstra 5G Sites
LocationMay-19Jun-19Jul-19Aug-19Sep-19Oct-19Nov-19Dec-19Jan-20Feb-20Mar-20
Adelaide464747 47 57 60 67 73 73118118
Brisbane636565115121130131139139172181
Canberra383838 38 41 44 45 48 48 48 48
Gold Coast545555 62 66 72 72 71 71 83 83
Hobart161818 21 34 35 36 36 36 36 36
Launceston 7 9 9 9 10 10 11 11 11 11 11
Melbourne525252 52 95200370387409435481
Perth434444 49 67 70 85 92 92106106
Sydney647175 75 85138238256270300347
Toowoomba 252525 25 26 26 26 26 26 26 26
Other - - - 35 73112133139139140142
TOTAL4084244285286758971,2141,2781,3141,4751,579

You can see these 5G sites and more at Australia Cellular Services.

Wednesday, 2020-Feb-5 — February SMS Snapshot — Rogers 5G Disappeared

January's SMS snapshot contains 234 Rogers 5G sites of which all but 20 are missing from February's snapshot. The red line in the top-left graph below shows February's snapshot lost 584 Rogers sites, of which 214 are from their 5G network. We doubt Rogers is scaling back their nascent 5G network, so these lost sites are likely an error.

Meanwhile, Telus' channel and site counts remain unchanged from January, and Bell's site count increased from 7,172 to 7,234, along with small increases in channel counts across all cellular spectrum bands.

Graph of site counts for Rogers, Telus, Bell from Mar 2018 to Feb 2020 Graph of channel counts for Rogers, Telus, Bell from Mar 2018 to Feb 2020 Graph of site counts for Freedom, Videotron, SaskTel, Eastlink from Mar 2018 to Feb 2020 Graph of channel counts for Freedom, Videotron, SaskTel, Eastlink from Mar 2018 to Feb 2020

We monitor SMS snapshots and supplement with proprietary and 3rd party data so that Canada Cellular Services provides the most accurate representation available of Canada's wireless landscape.

Monday, 2020-Feb-3 — Rogers 5G Network

Rogers recently announced ...

... we're starting our rollout of Canada's first 5G network in downtown Vancouver, Toronto, Ottawa and Montreal

Like we did last year with Telstra in Australia, we are now tracking the growth of Rogers' 5G network across Canada:

Rogers 5G sites in Downtown Vancouver
Graph of Rogers 5G sites in Downtown Vancouver
Rogers 5G sites in Downtown Toronto
Graph of Rogers 5G sites in Downtown Toronto

Rogers 5G uses Block I (in green below) from the BRS (2500Mhz) Frequency Block Plan:

BRS Frequency blocks in the 2500MHz band, including Block I which Rogers uses for 5G

Rogers 5G uses the lower 20MHz of Block I, leaving its upper 5MHz Restricted Band (RB) unused. Block I uses Time Division Duplexing (TDD) to share one frequency for downlink (DL) and uplink (UL) transmissions. In contrast, paired spectrum blocks (in cyan above) use Frequency Division Duplexing (FDD) which assigns different frequencies to DL / UL (eg. 2640 / 2520MHz).

TDD can operate statically or dynamically. Dynamic TDD adjusts the ratio of time slots assigned to DL and UL, as demand warrants. For example, people at a concert or a sporting event need more UL to push videos & audio recordings to social media; conversely, on the GO train, people need more DL to consume Netflix or podcasts. Dynamic TDD can handle either scenario. We do not know if Rogers 5G uses dynamic or static TDD; but for now — to meet the hype surrounding 5G — we'll assume dynamic TDD.

The growth of Rogers' 5G network is as follows:

 Rogers 5G Sites
DateTotalOntarioBC
2018-AUG3 Rogers Centre
Air Canada Centre
FirstOntario Centre
0
2019-JUN5 add:
Yonge-Dundas Square
Square One, SW corner
0
2019-AUG10 add:
St. Lawrence Market
Distillery District
165 Grange Ave
330 Gerrard St E
York University, west side
0
2019-NOV1448559
2019-DEC23414688

Friday, 2020-Jan-10 — State of the Nation (Canada)

The graphs below show cellular site counts for Canada's 20 most populous Census Metropolitan Areas (CMA), ordered by population (most populous first). They provide more detail than the site graphs we have published monthly since Jan 2019.

A CMA comprises one or more adjacent municipalities and townships that are closely integrated in some way. For example, the Toronto CMA consists of the city of Toronto along with Mississauga, Brampton, Markham, Vaughan, Richmond Hill, Oakville, Ajax, Milton and 15 other smaller townships. In contrast, the Halifax CMA consists of the municipality of Halifax by itself.

Toronto cell site counts Montreal cell site counts Vancouver cell site counts Calgary cell site counts Ottawa cell site counts Edmonton cell site counts Quebec (city) cell site counts Winnipeg cell site counts Hamilton cell site counts Kitchener - Cambridge - Waterloo cell site counts London cell site counts St. Catherines - Niagara cell site counts Halifax cell site counts Oshawa cell site counts Victoria cell site counts Windsor cell site counts Saskatoon cell site counts Regina cell site counts Sherbrooke cell site counts St. John's cell site counts

We can perform custom analysis of Canada's cellular & fixed wireless sites, channels & bandwidth capacity along other census geographies, from as small as the neighborhood to as large as the nation. Please contact us for more details.

Monday, 2020-Jan-6 — January SMS Snapshot Corrects Rogers Coverage

Last month, Rogers added 92 sites across Ontario and 583 sites across Quebec, which you can see in the sudden rise of the red line in the top-left graph below. But, most of these sites are not new, but only a correction to the disappearance of a similar number of sites one year earlier.

In short, SMS snapshots from Dec 2018 to Nov 2019 do not accurately represent Rogers coverage across Quebec and Ontario.

Graph of site counts for Rogers, Telus, Bell from Feb 2018 to Jan 2020 Graph of channel counts for Rogers, Telus, Bell from Feb 2018 to Jan 2020 Graph of site counts for Freedom, Videotron, SaskTel, Eastlink from Feb 2018 to Jan 2020 Graph of channel counts for Freedom, Videotron, SaskTel, Eastlink from Feb 2018 to Jan 2020

We monitor SMS snapshots and supplement with proprietary and 3rd party data so that Canada Cellular Services provides the most accurate representation available of Canada's wireless landscape.


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