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#1
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Do cell phone boosters really work, or is it just more hype to get you to
part with your dollars? In an area where there are hills and valleys, sometimes I can't get a very good signal in the valleys. It seems like I get calls all the time when I am in an area of poor reception. Has anyone had any experience with these? Joe |
#2
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Cell phone boosters that I know about are all hype.
A cell phone is a low power radio, basically similar to one of the walkie talkies that kids played with. Due to the limited power on Tx, I am amazed they work as well as they do. Still, they only work when you are more or less in line of sight of one of the cell Tower antenna systems. Surrounded by hills, valleys, or tall buildings, you are usually going to get poor reception. The so called boosters tend to be flashy metal plates and such which claim to focus the radio waves to get more range. Problem is even if they DID focus the radio signals, which they don't, it would be a directional signal and if you moved the phone away from the exact location, it would lose the signal.... Jim N6BIU |
#3
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Just you try using one of those 3 transistor CB Radios from the '60's!
Power control is one of the technical achievements of GSM - the mobile is instructed by the base to lower (or raise) its power appropriately. Generally, the maximum power from a handset is 33 dBm (at power level 5) which is more than sufficient for the 35km wide maximum cell size. The maximum cell size is determined by the length of the RACH burst. "Jim Pennell" wrote in message ink.net... A cell phone is a low power radio, basically similar to one of the walkie talkies that kids played with. Due to the limited power on Tx, I am amazed they work as well as they do. |
#4
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Oh, I agree that the power control is a major part of why cellphones work
as well as they do.... I was making a point that people need to consider cellphones as relatively short range radios. There is a tenancy to expect cellphones to work all the time, anywhere. But, most radio systems DON'T work that well. ----------------- As for boosters, the ones I've seen ARE passive. An active booster system would be fairly expensive. If they really worked, the cellphone manufacturers would have them as an option and just about everbody would own one. Jim Pennell N6BIU |
#5
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On Sat, 26 Jun 2004 23:04:01 GMT, "Jim Pennell"
wrote: Cell phone boosters that I know about are all hype. A cell phone is a low power radio, basically similar to one of the walkie talkies that kids played with. Due to the limited power on Tx, I am amazed they work as well as they do. Still, they only work when you are more or less in line of sight of one of the cell Tower antenna systems. Surrounded by hills, valleys, or tall buildings, you are usually going to get poor reception. The so called boosters tend to be flashy metal plates and such which claim to focus the radio waves to get more range. Problem is even if they DID focus the radio signals, which they don't, it would be a directional signal and if you moved the phone away from the exact location, it would lose the signal.... Are you saying these things are just basically passive horns like you see used in microwave? "Booster" implies something a little more *active*! -- "What is now proved was once only imagin'd." - William Blake, 1793. |
#6
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I think all that means "NO".
"Jim Pennell" wrote in message ink.net... Cell phone boosters that I know about are all hype. A cell phone is a low power radio, basically similar to one of the walkie talkies that kids played with. Due to the limited power on Tx, I am amazed they work as well as they do. Still, they only work when you are more or less in line of sight of one of the cell Tower antenna systems. Surrounded by hills, valleys, or tall buildings, you are usually going to get poor reception. The so called boosters tend to be flashy metal plates and such which claim to focus the radio waves to get more range. Problem is even if they DID focus the radio signals, which they don't, it would be a directional signal and if you moved the phone away from the exact location, it would lose the signal.... Jim N6BIU --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.711 / Virus Database: 467 - Release Date: 25/06/2004 |
#7
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It is like having a four foot antenna !
Well, not really, this is just wrong. Besides, your cell antenna is only inches long, having a four foot antenna (equal to using a 'booster') will get you nothing the cell frequencies are in the 900 Mhz and higher range. roy Jim wrote: Cell phone boosters that I know about are all hype. A cell phone is a low power radio, basically similar to one of the walkie talkies that kids played with. Due to the limited power on Tx, I am amazed they work as well as they do. Still, they only work when you are more or less in line of sight of one of the cell Tower antenna systems. Surrounded by hills, valleys, or tall buildings, you are usually going to get poor reception. The so called boosters tend to be flashy metal plates and such which claim to focus the radio waves to get more range. Problem is even if they DID focus the radio signals, which they don't, it would be a directional signal and if you moved the phone away from the exact location, it would lose the signal.... Jim N6BIU |
#8
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Jim Pennell wrote:
Cell phone boosters that I know about are all hype. A cell phone is a low power radio, basically similar to one of the walkie talkies that kids played with. Due to the limited power on Tx, I am amazed they work as well as they do. Still, they only work when you are more or less in line of sight of one of the cell Tower antenna systems. Surrounded by hills, valleys, or tall buildings, you are usually going to get poor reception. The so called boosters tend to be flashy metal plates and such which claim to focus the radio waves to get more range. Problem is even if they DID focus the radio signals, which they don't, it would be a directional signal and if you moved the phone away from the exact location, it would lose the signal.... Jim N6BIU They are as good as the $19.95 decals that were hyped on TV a year or so ago. Those are now sold as a joke for $.25 and not worth that amoumt Ted in Atlanta |
#9
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On Mon, 28 Jun 2004 15:53:59 -0400, tk hath writ:
Jim Pennell wrote: Cell phone boosters that I know about are all hype. They are as good as the $19.95 decals that were hyped on TV a year or so ago. Those are now sold as a joke for $.25 and not worth that amoumt Fools and their money _should_ be parted. Jonesy -- | Marvin L Jones | jonz | W3DHJ | linux | Gunnison, Colorado | @ | Jonesy | OS/2 __ | 7,703' -- 2,345m | config.com | DM68mn SK |
#10
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Joe wrote:
Do cell phone boosters really work, or is it just more hype to get you to part with your dollars? In an area where there are hills and valleys, sometimes I can't get a very good signal in the valleys. It seems like I get calls all the time when I am in an area of poor reception. Has anyone had any experience with these? Snake oil. I suppose the idea is that the booster couples to the antenna, and concentrates the phone's power along the horizon. That keeps you from wasting power shot into outer space, making it more likely that power will reach the base station. Same thing can happen in reverse: by making the antenna more sensitive to signals arriving along the horizon (where they come from) rather than those coming from outer space. (where there are no base stationsgrin) Problem is... that the design won't work. The ones I've seen are designed to insert in front of the battery. This location has a few problems: - The battery, which is mostly metal, shields anything inserted in front of it. Including the booster. - Any metal in the phone (including the battery, and the original antenna) affects the directivity of the booster - its ability to concentrate power along the horizon. Since the booster is not directly attached to the antenna, the metal in the phone also affects the indirect coupling of the booster to the antenna. Every phone is different. The size, the shape, how far the battery is from the antenna, it's all different from phone to phone. This means that a single booster design cannot possibly work with every phone. There would have to be a specific design for your phone. - In any case, the boosters I've seen don't match any valid antenna design I'm aware of. (they really look a lot like the "laundry tickets" we used to use in the dorms at the University of Wisconsin back in the 1970s!) (I wouldn't be too horribly surprised to learn they *are* laundry tickets...) It is certainly possible to build a cell phone booster. It would have to be custom-designed for your phone. And most users would regard them as impractically large and cumbersome. (probably not eye-doctor-approved, they'd be a serious poking hazard!) -- Doug Smith W9WI Pleasant View (Nashville), TN EM66 http://www.w9wi.com |
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