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| Tags: analog, car, moto, old, phone, programming |
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I have an old analog Motorola car phone that is useless on Bell. It has worked for years but their analog service is non-existent now. So I took out an account with Rogers. The phone has been programmed "correctly" by a Rogers tech that is (was) familiar with these phones at one time. The hex ESN was extracted from the phone in test mode and given to Rogers to covert. When trying to make a call, the Rogers lady comes on and says to "call *611 as your phone is not authorized............" I have tried different hex to decimal ESN converters. One called HexPal gives me 10 digits, which is one zero less than the Rogers conversion. I'm told that it should be 11 digits. If I covert each of the hex numbers separately and put them together, I get an entirely different number, but is 10 digits. I'm going back to London Cellular on Friday so they can take another 'kick at the can'. In the meantime I thought I'd try to find out something on my own. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
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I made a mistake. The ESN is displayed in four windows, 2 hexadecimal numbers
at a time. We wrote down each pair of hex numbers. Putting them all together as a single 8-digit hex number and converting it to decimal provides an 11 digit number. However, the phone won't call out except to Rogers *611. However, I'm trying to figure out why Motorola displays the ESN in four separate windows. If the results of each window are converted individually, then placed in a line, it will give an entirely different 11 digit decimal number. Is this the actual ESN?? Motorola in Utah don't have the answer. Thanks >>I have an old analog Motorola car phone that is useless on Bell. It has worked >>for years but their analog service is non-existent now. So I took out an >>account with Rogers. The phone has been programmed "correctly" by a Rogers tech >>that is (was) familiar with these phones at one time. >> >>The hex ESN was extracted from the phone in test mode and given to Rogers to >>covert. When trying to make a call, the Rogers lady comes on and says to "call >>*611 as your phone is not authorized............" >> >>I have tried different hex to decimal ESN converters. One called HexPal gives >>me 10 digits, which is one zero less than the Rogers conversion. I'm told that >>it should be 11 digits. If I covert each of the hex numbers separately and put >>them together, I get an entirely different number, but is 10 digits. >> >>I'm going back to London Cellular on Friday so they can take another 'kick at >>the can'. In the meantime I thought I'd try to find out something on my own. >> >>Any help would be appreciated. Thanks -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
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