RCR Wireless
  • News
  • Channels
    • 5G
    • 6G
    • BSS OSS
    • Carriers
    • IoT
    • Network Infrastructure
    • Open RAN
    • Private 5G
    • Telco AI
    • Telco Cloud
    • Test & Measurement
  • Resources
    • Reports
    • Webinars
    • White papers
    • AI Fundamentals
    • Analyst Angle
    • Editorial Calendar
    • Fundamentals
      • 5G NR Release 17
      • AI
        • Telco AI in 2025
    • Podcasts
      • Let’s Get Digital with Carrie Charles
      • Wireless Connectivity to Enable Industry 4.0 for the Middleprise
      • Well Technically…
      • Will 5G Change the World
      • Accelerating Industry 4.0 Digitalization
  • AI Infrastructure
  • Programs
  • Events
  • RCRtv
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
Thursday, July 16, 2026
RCR Wireless
  • News
  • Channels
    • 5G
    • 6G
    • BSS OSS
    • Carriers
    • IoT
    • Network Infrastructure
    • Open RAN
    • Private 5G
    • Telco AI
    • Telco Cloud
    • Test & Measurement
  • Resources
    • Reports
    • Webinars
    • White papers
    • AI Fundamentals
    • Analyst Angle
    • Editorial Calendar
    • Fundamentals
      • 5G NR Release 17
      • AI
        • Telco AI in 2025
    • Podcasts
      • Let’s Get Digital with Carrie Charles
      • Wireless Connectivity to Enable Industry 4.0 for the Middleprise
      • Well Technically…
      • Will 5G Change the World
      • Accelerating Industry 4.0 Digitalization
  • AI Infrastructure
  • Programs
  • Events
  • RCRtv
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
Add RCR Wireless as a preferred source on Google
  • Qualcomm 6G Insights
  • Huawei Content Hub
  • Qualcomm – 6G Vision
  • OSS/BSS Channel
  • RCRTech Roundtable: AI Infrastructure
RCR Wireless
RCR Wireless
  • Advanced Mimo
  • Mobile mmWave
  • 5G Positioning
  • Green Networks
  • Metaverse
  • Automotive
  • Industrial and Wide-area IoT
Copyright 2021 - All Right Reserved
Home - Ericsson to supply mmWave equipment, services to US Cellular
5GCarriersNetwork Infrastructure

Ericsson to supply mmWave equipment, services to US Cellular

by Catherine Sbeglia Nin July 28, 2020
written by Catherine Sbeglia Nin July 28, 2020 Share
LinkedinEmail
Share 0LinkedinEmail
128

The vendor will provide 24 GHz, 28 GHz and 39 GHz mmWave equipment and services

The same day that US Cellular revealed that it’s working with Nokia to add 5G millimeter-wave capabilities in the 24 GHz and 28 GHz spectrum bands to its network, the carrier also announced plans to expand its partnership with Ericsson, which will now provide the carrier with 24, 28 and 39 GHz millimeter wave (mmWave) equipment and services. The expansion will support the carrier’s consumer and enterprise 5G use cases, with the high-band spectrum equipment delivering faster speeds and lower latency. Also as part of the agreement, Ericsson will provide the carrier with 4G Citizens Broadband Radio Service (CBRS) equipment and services.

According to Rob Johnson, head of customer unit regional carriers for Ericsson, 24, 28 and 39 GHz mmWave high-band and CBRS mid-band radios along with the company’s 4G and 5G products and services, U.S. Cellular’s customers will be able to access “all of the speed and versatility that 5G networks have to offer.”

Towards the end of 2019, US Cellular selected Ericsson as a network equipment vendor for its 5G network, including 5G New Radio (NR) hardware and software in a number of states like Iowa and Wisconsin. Further, as the COVID-19 pandemic tore through parts of Wisconsin, Iowa, Illinois, New Hampshire, Maine and North Carolina this year, Ericsson helped U.S. Cellular increase mobile broadband capacity in those areas, which, according to Ericsson, allowed the carrier to manage the increased demand for data more successfully.

Speaking to the latest announcement, as well as previous work done with Ericsson, Michael Irizarry, executive Vice president and chief technology officer of US Cellular, commented, “We highly value our long relationship with Ericsson to provide cutting-edge network service for our customers. Working with Ericsson to deliver and deploy these solutions will help us deliver fast, reliable connectivity for customers in urban and rural areas, as we continue to build a more powerful network with the latest 5G technology.”

High-band, or mmWave, spectrum can, in ideal circumstances, deliver fiber-like speeds for Fixed Wireless Access, FWA, in areas with limited high-speed broadband options. However, mmWave is notoriously challenging to work with due to its poor penetration and propagation. Yet, when used in conjunction with mid- and low-band 5G spectrum, mmWave can be a significant network asset.

While U.S. operators have been leading the pack when it comes to mmWave, with most other operators around the world utilizing mid-band spectrum in the 3.4 GHz to 3.6 GHz range, The European Union’s 5G Observatory indicates that mmWave 5G services are, in fact, in the works around the world.

In Asia, specifically, Singapore, Japan, Taiwan and South Korea are all expected to adopt mmWave 5G in the near-term, while a number of other countries like Cyprus, Denmark, Malta and France are making moves in the 26 GHz space within the next two years.

For US Cellular,  its multi-year deployment of 5G mmWave has already begun and commercial availability is planned for 2021.

You Might Also Like
  • Nokia preps AI-RAN in 2027, promises 100% spectral gain in 2028 – but will operators buy it?
  • Tuesday (telco diary) | Ericsson holds the line
  •  VodafoneThree puts P.I. Works’ SMO at the center of network transformation
  • Prioritise AI outcomes over agent numbers, says Orange
  • The (agentic) future of AI-to-AI connectivity (Reader Forum)
  • Monday (telco diary) | Consolidation, orchestration, automation
Share 0 LinkedinEmail
Catherine Sbeglia Nin
Catherine Sbeglia Nin

Catherine Sbeglia Nin is the Managing Editor for RCR Wireless News, where she covers topics such as Wi-Fi, network infrastructure, AI and edge computing. She also produced and hosted Arden Media's podcast Well, technically... After studying English and Film & Media Studies at The University of Rochester, she moved to Madison, WI. Having already lived on both coasts, she thought she’d give the middle a try. So far, she likes it very much.

previous post
Inside Corning Optical’s new smart building
next post
Chinese telcos deploy 257,000 5G base stations in H1 2020: Report

White Papers

  • Enea White Paper: Why Intelligent AAA is the Swiss Army Knife of Telecom

  • CSG White Paper: Telco AI Enabler: Mediation’s Defining Role

  • Enea White Paper: Scalable Database Design for 5G and Beyond

  • Supermicro and NVIDIA Whitepaper: Powering sovereign AI at scale

  • VIAVI Whitepaper: RAN scenario generators and their critical role for future-proofing AI-native RAN in Advanced 5G and 6G networks

Editorial Reports

  • Report: Scaling Optical Networks For The Hyperscale And AI Era

  • Test And Measurement Market Pulse Report

  • Editorial Report: Securing telecom infrastructure for the quantum era

Webinars

  • Webinar: Building 6G — aligning technology, policy and purpose

  • SIMCom Webinar: Scaling your next deployment – from plastic to provisioning

  • Webinar: Rethinking the RAN as AI, cloud and openness converge

  • Webinar: Scale-Up, Scale-Out, Scale-Across – Building AI-Era Network Fabrics

  • Webinar: NTN in motion – evolving standards, expanding services

Since 1982, RCR Wireless News has been providing wireless and mobile industry news, insights, and analysis to mobile and wireless industry professionals, decision makers, policy makers, analysts and investors.

Facebook Twitter Youtube Linkedin Envelope Rss

Useful Links

  • Subscribe
  • About RCR Wireless News
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise
  • Editorial Calendar
  • Archive
  • RSS
  • Wireless News Archive
  • Subscribe
  • About RCR Wireless News
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise
  • Editorial Calendar
  • Archive
  • RSS
  • Wireless News Archive

Edtior's Picks

SoftBank is deploying OpenAI-powered security agents across Japan’s critical infrastructure
Nokia and Taiwan Mobile are building an AI-native 5G network
Nokia preps AI-RAN in 2027, promises 100% spectral gain in 2028 – but...

Latest Articles

SoftBank is deploying OpenAI-powered security agents across Japan’s critical infrastructure
Nokia and Taiwan Mobile are building an AI-native 5G network
Nokia preps AI-RAN in 2027, promises 100% spectral gain in 2028 – but will operators buy it?
Agentic AI to reshape network demand, KPMG says

© 2026 RCR Wireless News All Right Reserved. Developed by Eight Hats.

Cookie Policy | Privacy Policy

RCR Wireless
  • News
  • Channels
    • 5G
    • 6G
    • BSS OSS
    • Carriers
    • IoT
    • Network Infrastructure
    • Open RAN
    • Private 5G
    • Telco AI
    • Telco Cloud
    • Test & Measurement
  • Resources
    • Reports
    • Webinars
    • White papers
    • AI Fundamentals
    • Analyst Angle
    • Editorial Calendar
    • Fundamentals
      • 5G NR Release 17
      • AI
        • Telco AI in 2025
    • Podcasts
      • Let’s Get Digital with Carrie Charles
      • Wireless Connectivity to Enable Industry 4.0 for the Middleprise
      • Well Technically…
      • Will 5G Change the World
      • Accelerating Industry 4.0 Digitalization
  • AI Infrastructure
  • Programs
  • Events
  • RCRtv
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
RCR Wireless
  • News
  • Channels
    • 5G
    • 6G
    • BSS OSS
    • Carriers
    • IoT
    • Network Infrastructure
    • Open RAN
    • Private 5G
    • Telco AI
    • Telco Cloud
    • Test & Measurement
  • Resources
    • Reports
    • Webinars
    • White papers
    • AI Fundamentals
    • Analyst Angle
    • Editorial Calendar
    • Fundamentals
      • 5G NR Release 17
      • AI
        • Telco AI in 2025
    • Podcasts
      • Let’s Get Digital with Carrie Charles
      • Wireless Connectivity to Enable Industry 4.0 for the Middleprise
      • Well Technically…
      • Will 5G Change the World
      • Accelerating Industry 4.0 Digitalization
  • AI Infrastructure
  • Programs
  • Events
  • RCRtv
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
@2020 - All Right Reserved. Designed and Developed by PenciDesign