MrLaserman
Well-Known Member
If anyone has had any experience porting a google voice number into Tmobile... how long did it take before you had service on the tmobile phone?
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Transferring your existing single phone number (wireless or landline) to T-Mobile number usually takes anywhere from 10 minutes to 24 hours. Transferring multiple – lines may take up to 10 days, however most requests are completed within six calendar days.
Thanks tube517. I only ported one number so we'll see. If I don't have it by Friday I'll call them that afternoon.
I forgot to mention the quality of the phone calls going thru groove IP and Google voice wasn't always crystal clear and I needed it crystal clear all the time. Some calls sounded like I was in a tunnel even on my company's WiFi. That was not all the time but it did happen. The delay in gv/groove ip calls was also annoying to customers and my managers. I used Google Voice with only one phone not multiple phones.??? I don't get it. You needed more minutes because you couldn't use GrooveIP - you bought more minutes. You used your GV number for business (like me). You had a GV number for business before - you still had a GV number for business. Nothing changed except the method of connection. Whether you port or not, with no GrooveIP now your GV number uses your minutes. As I see it, all you've really done is give up a phone number. So why did you need to port the GV number to your carrier? What am I missing?
I don't think this forum would want me linking to that forum so I won't... but most people know of that forum so it would be easy to figure out.
So something like "hey, XDA had a cool thread that expands upon this topic, interesting reading if you wanna check it out: <thread link>" would be great. Sharing information == we all win. 
I forgot to mention the quality of the phone calls going thru groove IP and Google voice wasn't always crystal clear and I needed it crystal clear all the time. Some calls sounded like I was in a tunnel even on my company's WiFi. That was not all the time but it did happen. The delay in gv/groove ip calls was also annoying to customers and my managers. I used Google Voice with only one phone not multiple phones.
Another issue is I couldn't send MMS on Google Voice. It was confusing my customers to get a picture from another phone number and then having to explain all of that. Even friends and relatives were confused about the different numbers.
Trust me, I loved GV and GrooveIP and SparePhone (was a better app than Groove IP). And I am pretty frugal. (I have another GV number using it strictly for my "home" phone using an OBI device.)


I observed these same issues back when I was using GrooveIP + GV. I've been quite pleased with some of the recent GV updates, including voice calls via Hangouts and improved MMS support. About the only thing that I'm left lacking is elegant support for group MMSes - it gets broken into a bunch of individual threads instead of a single conversation. I've actually stopped having calls forward to my T-Mobile number entirely and just rely on the Hangouts VoIP now. Quite happy.
Though I do, of course, understand that some of the compromises just don't work for other folks needs, so that's absolutely fine.![]()