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szilagyic writes:
On Jul 17, 4:44 am, LA4RT Jon KÃ¥re Hellan wrote: Around here, marginal areas mostly have 900 MHz. So if you need an external antenna at all, you probably need one for 900. OP: There has to be something wrong with your antenna system. 73 Jon Thanks for the reply. When you say 900 MHz, what frequency range should I look for, for an antenna? For instance, the one I have now claims it covers 824-896Mhz, so apparently it doesn't cover 900? Sorry, I wasn't clear enough. And come to think of it, I probably made some unwarranted assumptions. I'm in Europe. Cell phones here use the 900 MHz band and the 1800 MHz band. All phones are GSM. I believe you are in the U.S., where there's both GSM, CDMA and some analog, and frequencies are different. In the U.S., GSM uses the 800 MHz and 1900 MHz bands, and I would expect CDMA to use the same bands. In the U.S., rural areas are typically covered by 800 MHz networks, as you want lower frequencies for larger cells. But you'll have to check if this is actually the case for you. If it is, your antenna is cut for the right frequency, but there seems to be something wrong with it. Good luck Jon |
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