Thứ Sáu, 25 tháng 3, 2011

Is there any good home cell phone antennas?

Is there any good home cell phone antennas?

I’m looking for a very excellent cell phone antenna. I am going to buy me a prepaid cell phone and here in the southern part of missouri in a very hilly area there is no signals. I need to be reachable 24/7, the only way I can now recieve a signal is to climb a tree or something high. Any Thoughts?

Answer by Jimmy Quienstion
try this website this is everywhere i got mine (verizon) http://www.calcellular.com/antenna.html?gclid=CJOhjtnY5ZoCFSAhDQodjXNGBw

Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!

cell phone antenna
cell phone antennas

Image by sysadmnling
i like the reflection

Everytime I talk to my mom on her cell phone the signal fades in and out. It could be here house. I want to do something if I can to fix the conundrum.

Answer by weebles
I have used antennas on about each phone going (that can take antennas) A lot of newer phones won’t take antennas. For those that do I have seen (for the most part) fantastic results. They don’t turn a no service area into a full signal but it might bump you up a bar or two. For more signal check on 3 watt amplifiers for the phone. It’ll cost about $ 300 though I have one and it works fantastic. Don’t buy it in anticipation of you know if you can hook an antenna to the phone though.

Answer by CrAzY
What antenna will work best for me?

A: It depends on how you use your phone. 0 decibel (dB) gain antennas, often called unity gain, are usually best in cities or mountains because they provide the same coverage vertically and horizontally (note: this proclamation is not always right when there is excellent coverage in those areas). Cellular was originally designed for 3dB gain antennas as they provide the optimal combination of vertical and horizontal patterns. 5dB antennas are the best for flat areas because their pattern is primarily horizontal.

Cell phone boosters are not your answer the conundrum would be your wireless company or your phone.
It basically uses another source of energy and eats it up making a better signal so less battery more signal.
eventually it will ruin your cell phone and cell phone battery.

Answer by inthecityof
Some aftermarket antennas can help to fix the conundrum, but the best way is to buy a cellular repeater. These work to actively collect the cell phone signal from a particular management, and amplify and rebroadcast them about your house. If you have weak signal in a particular home or office, and strong signal outside, then this is the perfect solution. http://www.cellboosterstore.com offer some fantastic repeaters that can be used for this puprose.

Answer by sdduuuude
There are two ways to answer this question.

1) Do they give you a stronger signal?
2) Do they give you a getter signal.

Lets take upon yourself that they really give you a stronger signal.
Some will, dome wont – depending on quality.

Even if they work to give you a stronger signal, it doesn’t always mean they give you a better signal.

Cell phones which use CDMA technology rely on the signal-to-noise ratio, with a minimum signal strength needed. Because the boosters boost the noise as much as the excellent signal, they do nothing because you have the same signal-to-noise ratio.

Now, on a CDMA network, if you are out in the boonies and there is only one cell tower that can serve you, with very few other users around, but your phone just out of range, they may help because the signal-to-noise ratio will be fine, while the signal strength is weak. This is a signal-strength-limited environment.

Cell phones which use ancient analog technology or frequency-division technology may be helped by a booster, but again you have to be on the edge of coverage, or on the edge of a coverage hole but not in a busy, populated area. And certainly not in an area everywhere the phone calls are failing because there are too many signals.

So, in very, very limited cases, if they really give you a stronger signaly, they might help.

Also, consider they may work better to help the reception that you get from the cell tower, not necessarily the reception that the tower gets from your phone. Dropped calls can occur because of the cell tower’s reception by your phone as well as the other way around.so if it isn’t a two-way booster, it will really not do anything.

I hear this alot:
“If they worked, the manufacturers would place them in the phones to commence with.”

Cell phone manufacturers and service providers wouldn’t necessarily place them into phones if they worked because they are expensive and don’t work for everyone.

The case everywhere a user in a remote area in signal-limited areas (as opposed to signal-to-noise limited) is too small to justify putting them in.

A repeater is also a excellent thought in remote, signal-limited areas.
But, keep in mind, they don’t help terrible signal-to-noise ratios either.

Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!
East Richmond Heights residents fascinate cell phone permit
Residents in East Richmond Heights are appealing a county pronouncement permitting T-Mobile USA to lengthen a 40-foot-tall utility pole on Taft Avenue to 52 feet to bed in two wireless communications antennas.
Read more on El Cerrito Journal

How-to increase your mobile’s reception with a simple coffee and cookie can antenna.


Không có nhận xét nào:

Đăng nhận xét