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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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#81
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair
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Jeff Liebermann writes:
services and vendors are on the tower, building, pole, whatever. A tower ID to lat-long database will certainly be useful, but the real problem is what frequency to use. For example, for LTE: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_LTE_networks the bands in use world wide are many and varied. Same with TDM vs FDM, full duplex vs half duplex, odd splits. Then, there are sub-bands for each vendor. Notice the number of question marks in above tables. You could use GPS coordinates or just scan all the frequencies: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LTE_frequency_bands LTE is a pain, we're just moving from a global 3G/UMTS product to LTE. This means a different antenna design, LTE module version and whatever for each region and even operator specific ones :-( -- mikko |
#82
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Posted to comp.mobile.android,misc.phone.mobile.iphone,sci.electronics.repair
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In message Stijn De Jong wrote:
On Sat, 18 Feb 2017 01:25:52 -0000 (UTC), Lewis wrote: The one that provides LTE coverage. As far as I know, they only have one of those. I have two completely different types of CellSpot devices, both of which say LTE. Here is a photo of one type in my house, called "CellSpot" and "LTE": http://i.cubeupload.com/uNXXgZ.jpg that's the only LTE CellSpot I've seen. It has blinkenlights. Here is a photo of another type alongside it, also called "CellSpot" and "LTE": https://u.cubeupload.com/WoN2gQ.jpg Those are 4G LTE signal boosters which I've never seen before. They were not on offer from T-Mobile when I asked about a CellSpot for my home. In the basement (cellspot is in the garage) I have -78dB currently. If I go into the garage it's about -60dB-65dB, IIRC. That's absolutely astoundingly high cellular signal strength (RSSI). All the articles put the range at -50 to -110 or -120dBm. -50 is the maximum possible, and below -120 there is no signal. Are you getting that from your T-Mobile micro tower? How do you know? (Because that's the entire reason for this thread.) my iPhone displays the dB in the upper left corner. I's at -78 again. -- I mistook thee for thy better Hamlet Act III scene 4 |
#83
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Posted to comp.mobile.android,misc.phone.mobile.iphone,sci.electronics.repair
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In message Carlos E. R. wrote:
On 2017-02-18 02:37, Lewis wrote: In message Carlos E. R. wrote: On 2017-02-16 21:57, Stijn De Jong wrote: The one potentially nice thing that OpenSignal provided on Android was a compass-like pointer toward the tower it's connected to; however, that pointer doesn't seem even remotely aligned with where I know that tower to be, so, I'm not sure if that compass-like pointer is fluff or if there is a major reflection of radio waves going on off of someone's solar panel array or expansive windows overlooking the valley below. There is no way the phone can determine the location of the tower from the signal, Sure they can. The signal include Latitude and Longitude for the tower. That's not the signal. That's decoding the data on it, and reading it. Then finding via GPS the exact location of the terminal, then calculating the direction of the tower. No no, orange juice isn't from oranges! First you have to peel the orange, and then you have to squeeze it. It's not part of the orange! Whatever. -- I'll have what the gentleman on the floor is having. |
#84
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Posted to comp.mobile.android,misc.phone.mobile.iphone,sci.electronics.repair
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On Fri, 17 Feb 2017 17:21:15 -0500, nospam wrote:
they also refarmed their network so that aws is not required anymore. Smoking some good stuff, eh? Clue: Amazon Web Services was never required. Cheers, -- tlvp -- Avant de repondre, jeter la poubelle, SVP. |
#85
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Posted to comp.mobile.android,misc.phone.mobile.iphone,sci.electronics.repair
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In article , tlvp
wrote: they also refarmed their network so that aws is not required anymore. Smoking some good stuff, eh? Clue: Amazon Web Services was never required. clue: don't comment about things you don't understand. clue#2: don't smoke whatever it is you're smoking. |
#86
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Posted to comp.mobile.android,misc.phone.mobile.iphone,sci.electronics.repair
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On Sat, 18 Feb 2017 01:23:56 +0000 (UTC), Stijn De Jong wrote:
Since none of us are gonna run our own tests with three phones in our hands for weeks on end, Right. No three phones, just two. And no tests "for weeks on end," just casual observations. T-Mo vs. VZW: * Most places in NE I check signal, they're both present and adequate. * Some places I find T-Mo service utterly absent, but VZW strong enough to * use (in some of those, at&t is accessible, but won't allow T-Mo roaming). * Some places I was hoping to find VZW, that one's absent, but T-Mo is OK. * Still other places neither is usably present. Others' experiences are almost sure to differ. Cheers, -- tlvp -- Avant de repondre, jeter la poubelle, SVP. |
#87
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Posted to comp.mobile.android,misc.phone.mobile.iphone,sci.electronics.repair
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On 02/17/2017 04:01 PM, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
On Fri, 17 Feb 2017 14:27:15 -0800, The Real Bev wrote: On 02/16/2017 07:21 PM, Jeff Liebermann wrote: Marketing research: How much would pay for such a device? Nothing. I've been hooked on 'free' for a long time, especially since the paid version is rarely significantly better than the free version. Oh well. It's rather difficult to build a company based on a free product (unless one sells advertising). Fine with me. Just how much can a person make from app-advertising? Once the DF method is established by me or someone else, I'm sure it will be cloned, copied, or distributed as "open hardware". That's why I haven't done anything with the idea for several decades. Enjoy free while it lasts. I'm thinking more of a Kickstarter, Indiegogo, or other crowdfunding project. And yet people do it... -- Cheers, Bev "My dad used to say: Laugh, and the whole world laughs with you. Cry, and I'll give you something to cry about you little *******." -Jeff Goldblum |
#88
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Posted to comp.mobile.android,misc.phone.mobile.iphone,sci.electronics.repair
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In article , The Real Bev
wrote: Marketing research: How much would pay for such a device? Nothing. I've been hooked on 'free' for a long time, especially since the paid version is rarely significantly better than the free version. Oh well. It's rather difficult to build a company based on a free product (unless one sells advertising). Fine with me. Just how much can a person make from app-advertising? a lot. http://www.adweek.com/digital/google...billion-even-m obile-continues-pose-challenges-172722/ During the second quarter of 2016, Alphabet's revenue hit $21.5 billion, a 21 percent year-over-year increase. Of that revenue, $19.1 billion came from Google's advertising business, up from $16 billion a year ago. |
#89
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Posted to comp.mobile.android,misc.phone.mobile.iphone,sci.electronics.repair
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On Fri, 17 Feb 2017 17:12:20 -0800, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
As for the tower antenna patterns being direction, it's a matter of what you consider directional. In the typical 3 sided tower configuration, the sector antennas have a horizontal beamwidth of about 60 degrees. The tower can and does indicate which sector is being used, but that has a granularity of 120 degrees, which is hardly accurate enough to determine anyones position. Hi Jeff, This article describes the three 120-degree sectors: Alpha is the North FACING vertical antenna on the cell tower Beta is the Southeast FACING vertical antenna on the cell tower Gamma is the Southwest FACING vertical antenna on the cell tower http://www.evdoforums.com/thread15374.html There is a way to tell which sector antenna you're connected to from the cell id. Also, the newer Android APIs now seem to expose the frequency bands: http://people.csail.mit.edu/bkph/cel...r_inside.shtml |
#90
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Posted to comp.mobile.android,misc.phone.mobile.iphone,sci.electronics.repair
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On Sat, 18 Feb 2017 14:20:39 -0000 (UTC), Lewis wrote:
Here is a photo of one type in my house, called "CellSpot" and "LTE": http://i.cubeupload.com/uNXXgZ.jpg that's the only LTE CellSpot I've seen. It has blinkenlights. Thanks for confirming which one, because there is an entire thread on the various very different "things" that T-Mobile MARKETING calls a "Personal CellSpot" which they also call a "4G LTE CellSpot" such that saying those words is rendered meaningless. If someone says they have a CellSpot, or a "Personal CellSpot", all they're definitively saying is that they have a micro tower, but there are multiple types of similarly branded micro towers, each of which is quite different in operation. 1. One type is a signal booster, which is purely cellular. 2. Another type is a microtower connected to your Internet router. 3. A third type is a router (I have not tested this type yet). 4. A fourth type is an access point (I haven't tested this either, yet). 5. And, while we're at it, there is WiFi calling (which isn't a "cellspot") Here is a photo of another type alongside it, also called "CellSpot" and "LTE": https://u.cubeupload.com/WoN2gQ.jpg Those are 4G LTE signal boosters which I've never seen before. They were not on offer from T-Mobile when I asked about a CellSpot for my home. Yes, but my point is that they also are branded by T-Mobile MARKETING as a "Personal CellSpot" and they all say "4G LTE". The only difference in branding is in the final word *after* the meaningless "CellSpot" brand name (and in the case of the one you have, they don't even put a final word after the meaningless "CellSpot" brand name). In the basement (cellspot is in the garage) I have -78dB currently. If I go into the garage it's about -60dB-65dB, IIRC. That's absolutely astoundingly high cellular signal strength (RSSI). All the articles put the range at -50 to -110 or -120dBm. -50 is the maximum possible, and below -120 there is no signal. Are you getting that from your T-Mobile micro tower? How do you know? (Because that's the entire reason for this thread.) my iPhone displays the dB in the upper left corner. I's at -78 again. I knew how you got the decibel RSSI (received signal strength indication), but the question was how do you know which "tower" you're getting your current signal from. As far as anyone can tell, it's impossible to get the cell id tower from the phone on an iOS device, so you have to use an Android device to figure that out. I have a similar setup to yours, except that I have at least three (and maybe more) towers for my phone to choose from (two of which are inside my own home). So just having a decibel reading doesn't tell me *which* tower I'm connected to (since there are at least three or more to choose from). The good news is that my decibel readings are now in the -50dBm to -60dBm range (instead of the minus 90 to minus 100 decibel range as they were before I hooked up the micro towers!). |
#91
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Posted to comp.mobile.android,misc.phone.mobile.iphone,sci.electronics.repair
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In article , Stijn De Jong
wrote: In the basement (cellspot is in the garage) I have -78dB currently. If I go into the garage it's about -60dB-65dB, IIRC. That's absolutely astoundingly high cellular signal strength (RSSI). All the articles put the range at -50 to -110 or -120dBm. -50 is the maximum possible, and below -120 there is no signal. Are you getting that from your T-Mobile micro tower? How do you know? (Because that's the entire reason for this thread.) my iPhone displays the dB in the upper left corner. I's at -78 again. I knew how you got the decibel RSSI (received signal strength indication), but the question was how do you know which "tower" you're getting your current signal from. based on what you've written, no, you did not know that. As far as anyone can tell, it's impossible to get the cell id tower from the phone on an iOS device, wrong. so you have to use an Android device to figure that out. maybe you do, but the rest of the world doesn't, assuming they even care what the tower id is. everyone *other* than cellular engineers don't care, and the cellular engineers have *far* more sophisticated equipment to find out than by using an android or ios phone. |
#92
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Posted to comp.mobile.android,misc.phone.mobile.iphone,sci.electronics.repair
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On Fri, 17 Feb 2017 18:43:40 -0800, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
My GSM phones show a valid lat-long. My CDMA phones show no data. Hi Jeff, I'm still trying to figure this stuff out, but I noticed this MIT app (CellTracker) "attempts" to show both what the GPS says and the latitude and longitude for Verizon. http://people.csail.mit.edu/bkph/ima...04-16-15-29-00 CellTracker: http://people.csail.mit.edu/bkph/CellTracker |
#93
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Posted to comp.mobile.android,misc.phone.mobile.iphone,sci.electronics.repair
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On Sat, 18 Feb 2017 03:23:29 +0100, Carlos E. R. wrote:
There is no way the phone can determine the location of the tower from the signal, Sure they can. The signal include Latitude and Longitude for the tower. That's not the signal. That's decoding the data on it, and reading it. Then finding via GPS the exact location of the terminal, then calculating the direction of the tower. This finding-where-the-tower is stuff is all new to me, but from what I've been reading, it's impossible to do on an iPhone, and, the directional pointer on OpenSignal is, at best, a wild-assed guess. I'm still trying to figure all this out, but, it seems that OpenSignal is likely a phony app that simply uses your cellular connection to *guess* which cell tower you're connected to (based purely on your signal strength and carrier). The actual location of the tower is well known to be wrong, since it's merely an average location of the *cell phones*! Yup. They don't locate the tower. They simply average the location of the cellphone locations! Says so he "In OpenSignal ... the tower locations reported are not the actual antenna coordinates but the average of coordinates where cell phones were when they connected to that antenna" http://people.csail.mit.edu/bkph/cel...r_inside.shtml Here's a classic result of the OpenSignal inaccurate averaging algorithm: http://people.csail.mit.edu/bkph/ima...1130072559.png |
#94
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Posted to comp.mobile.android,misc.phone.mobile.iphone,sci.electronics.repair
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On Sat, 18 Feb 2017 14:22:35 -0000 (UTC), Lewis wrote:
That's decoding the data on it, and reading it. Then finding via GPS the exact location of the terminal, then calculating the direction of the tower. No no, orange juice isn't from oranges! First you have to peel the orange, and then you have to squeeze it. It's not part of the orange! Whatever. I had never used these apps before a couple of days ago, but now, after using a dozen of these cellular reporting apps, I'd assess OpenSignal to be almost non-functional compared to the apps that actually report correct information. As a "toy" app, OpenSignal is fine; but for correct and accurate information, OpenSignal appears to be a veritable bust. Still, it's one of the only related apps that my iOS device can run, so, even a toy app such as OpenSignal appears to be (compared to, say, Network Cell Info Lite) is better than nothing I guess. |
#95
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The great news is that I've gotten my cellular signal up from around
-100dBm to consistently better than -60dBm, which is an astoundingly astronomical improvement in signal strength! For example, here is a reading, just now, of -53dBm on my cellphone: http://i.cubeupload.com/GEYEzS.jpg From what I've read, cellular signal doesn't get much better than that. However, there is so much data that each of these apps output that I'm still going through all the useful information to figure out exactly which device is doing what (since I have an old micro tower and a new femto tower in my house). |
#96
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On Saturday, February 18, 2017 at 9:24:29 AM UTC-5, Lewis wrote:
In message Carlos E. R. wrote: On 2017-02-18 02:37, Lewis wrote: In message Carlos E. R. wrote: On 2017-02-16 21:57, Stijn De Jong wrote: The one potentially nice thing that OpenSignal provided on Android was a compass-like pointer toward the tower it's connected to; however, that pointer doesn't seem even remotely aligned with where I know that tower to be, so, I'm not sure if that compass-like pointer is fluff or if there is a major reflection of radio waves going on off of someone's solar panel array or expansive windows overlooking the valley below. There is no way the phone can determine the location of the tower from the signal, Sure they can. The signal include Latitude and Longitude for the tower. That's not the signal. That's decoding the data on it, and reading it. Then finding via GPS the exact location of the terminal, then calculating the direction of the tower. No no, orange juice isn't from oranges! Correct. Its from water, other molecules, elements and sunlight absorbed by the Orange Tree. |
#97
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Posted to comp.mobile.android,misc.phone.mobile.iphone,sci.electronics.repair
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On Thu, 16 Feb 2017 01:52:24 +0000 (UTC), Stijn De Jong wrote:
Q: Which app do you use on iOS or Android to figure out all the cellular towers and signal strengths of the cellular signal (CDMA or GSM) in your area? Summary of the freebie app selected after a few days of testing. I've dumped the freeware version of Network Signal Info because it kept hanging, and opted to use as my primary real-time app "Network Cell Info Lite" (The best logging app was NetMonitor). One nice thing about Network Signal Info payware is that it reports not only the current (aka registered) cell, but also the neighbor cell strengths. http://wilysis.com/networkcellinfo Here are some screenshots of today's scan to help you see what it reports. The good news is that I've brought my signal strength in the mountains, miles from the nearest T-Mobile tower, up from around minus ninety to minus one hundred decibels to consistently better than minus fifty-five to minus sixty-five decibels (which is astounding!). Here are the results of a scan this morning from my new "gsm" folder: http://i.cubeupload.com/lgDafB.jpg In this scan are the unique cell tower identification numbers: http://i.cubeupload.com/5H7qmX.jpg The second tab shows the ever-changing raw data in text format: http://i.cubeupload.com/3gMofW.jpg While the third tab shows a time-sequence graph showing consistency: http://i.cubeupload.com/3rDsHX.jpg There are multiple plots of multiple types of signal strengths: http://i.cubeupload.com/4HQqh8.jpg And a quick table of DATA ON/OFF connection percentage statistics: http://i.cubeupload.com/NQ0xJU.jpg You can export the entire database in multiple file formats: http://i.cubeupload.com/W1AAaK.jpg And there is a nice summary page of the device & sim card information: http://i.cubeupload.com/hCXKXJ.jpg I may end up getting the payware if I can't find a freeware app that reports the neighbor cell strengths, which would also be useful information. But there are plenty of freeware apps to explore, e.g., this MIT app: http://people.csail.mit.edu/bkph/CellTracker.shtml |
#98
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On Thu, 16 Feb 2017 01:52:24 +0000 (UTC), Stijn De Jong wrote:
Q: Which app do you use on iOS or Android to figure out all the cellular towers and signal strengths of the cellular signal (CDMA or GSM) in your area? This is a question and initial observation for Jeff Liebermann. QUESTION: Does a cellular booster propagate the original cell tower identification? (Or does the boosted signal have its own cell tower identification number?) OBSERVATION: 1. I can range my cellular signal strength by almost half a million times: http://i.cubeupload.com/zN4Dkb.jpg 2. I ran an experiment, starting with a stead very good signal strength: http://i.cubeupload.com/TPLLXF.jpg 3. Then I unplugged, one by one, the two micro towers in my house: http://i.cubeupload.com/ciKH3h.jpg Interestingly, when I unplugged the router-connected micro tower, I could see the unique cell tower ID change immediately to a set of cell towers that are known to be within a few miles of me. Yet, when I unplugged the cellular booster, the signal dropped, but the cell towers simply went to a much larger set of cell towers, some of which are known to be ten or fifteen miles away. However, I could still see the set of towers in the prior step in the makeup. My initial assumption (which needs to be tested) is two fold: a. It seems the router-connected micro tower has its own unique cell id. b. It seems the booster may simply propagate the "real" cell tower cell id. Does that make sense? |
#99
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Posted to comp.mobile.android,misc.phone.mobile.iphone,sci.electronics.repair
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In message Stijn De Jong wrote:
I knew how you got the decibel RSSI (received signal strength indication), but the question was how do you know which "tower" you're getting your current signal from. I haven never cared to check. If I unplug the t-mbile cellspot, my signal in the basement drops significantly and I lose calls. I don't care which tower or micro tower I am connected to. So just having a decibel reading doesn't tell me *which* tower I'm connected to (since there are at least three or more to choose from). So? Who cares? The good news is that my decibel readings are now in the -50dBm to -60dBm range (instead of the minus 90 to minus 100 decibel range as they were before I hooked up the micro towers!). That's all that matters. -- The real American folksong is a rag -- a mental jag A rhythmic tone for the chronic blues |
#100
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Posted to comp.mobile.android,misc.phone.mobile.iphone,sci.electronics.repair
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On Sat, 18 Feb 2017 13:09:46 -0800, The Real Bev
wrote: On 02/17/2017 04:01 PM, Jeff Liebermann wrote: On Fri, 17 Feb 2017 14:27:15 -0800, The Real Bev wrote: Just how much can a person make from app-advertising? You keep thinking of an Android App. This is a hardware based direction finder that has a built in computah to do the number crunching. No smartphone or Android gizmo involved. Therefore, I won't be selling apps on the Play Store. "Google Play app revenue up 82% in Q4 2016, 60% growth for the App Store" http://www.gsmarena.com/google_play_app_revenue_up_82_in_q4_2016_60_growth _for_the_app_store-news-22759.php Google Play store collected $3.3Billion in revenue. Last year, the split was 70% Google and 30% developer. Therefore the developers collected about: $3.3 billion / 0.7 * 0.3 = $1.4 billion This year, the split is 85% Google and 15% developer, which indicates that Google is getting greedy, developers were making to much money, or both. Blundering onward, the Play store has 2.6 million apps available. About half are free, so that's 1.3 million apps. Average revenue per app would be: $1.4 billion revenue / 1.3 million apps = $1,100 revenue/app/year Not enough to support product development. -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
#101
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Posted to comp.mobile.android,misc.phone.mobile.iphone,sci.electronics.repair
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On Sat, 18 Feb 2017 21:14:27 +0000 (UTC), Stijn De Jong
wrote: On Fri, 17 Feb 2017 17:12:20 -0800, Jeff Liebermann wrote: As for the tower antenna patterns being direction, it's a matter of what you consider directional. In the typical 3 sided tower configuration, the sector antennas have a horizontal beamwidth of about 60 degrees. The tower can and does indicate which sector is being used, but that has a granularity of 120 degrees, which is hardly accurate enough to determine anyones position. Hi Jeff, This article describes the three 120-degree sectors: Alpha is the North FACING vertical antenna on the cell tower Beta is the Southeast FACING vertical antenna on the cell tower Gamma is the Southwest FACING vertical antenna on the cell tower http://www.evdoforums.com/thread15374.html I dialed #878# and got: "Welcome to Verizon Wireless. Your call cannot be completed as dialed..." There is a way to tell which sector antenna you're connected to from the cell id. Also, the newer Android APIs now seem to expose the frequency bands: http://people.csail.mit.edu/bkph/cel...r_inside.shtml Nice article. I think there is a way of extracting the sector but I don't know what it might be and am too lazy to work it out right now. My leaky roof and irate customers come first. -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
#102
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Posted to comp.mobile.android,misc.phone.mobile.iphone,sci.electronics.repair
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In article , Jeff
Liebermann wrote: Blundering onward, the Play store has 2.6 million apps available. About half are free, so that's 1.3 million apps. Average revenue per app would be: $1.4 billion revenue / 1.3 million apps = $1,100 revenue/app/year Not enough to support product development. the average isn't what matters. a quality app can be *very* profitable. |
#103
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On Sat, 18 Feb 2017 21:31:53 +0000 (UTC), Stijn De Jong
wrote: On Fri, 17 Feb 2017 18:43:40 -0800, Jeff Liebermann wrote: My GSM phones show a valid lat-long. My CDMA phones show no data. I'm still trying to figure this stuff out, but I noticed this MIT app (CellTracker) "attempts" to show both what the GPS says and the latitude and longitude for Verizon. http://people.csail.mit.edu/bkph/ima...04-16-15-29-00 CellTracker: http://people.csail.mit.edu/bkph/CellTracker Nice app, but it does NOT show the lat-long of the local Verizon cell site. See attached screen grab: http://802.11junk.com/jeffl/crud/CellTracker.jpg Celltracker for Android 5.0 on a Moto G v1 phone running Android 5.1. Note from the screengrab that the GPS is on and running. The "WIFI Lat-Long" is the location of my house, not the local cell site. I don't know where my Lat-Long came from (probably Google Maps database). -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
#104
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On Sat, 18 Feb 2017 22:52:40 -0500, nospam wrote:
the average isn't what matters. a quality app can be *very* profitable. So can a lottery ticket, and it's easier to develop. Cheers, -- tlvp -- Avant de repondre, jeter la poubelle, SVP. |
#105
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On Sun, 19 Feb 2017 02:07:16 +0000 (UTC), Stijn De Jong
wrote: On Thu, 16 Feb 2017 01:52:24 +0000 (UTC), Stijn De Jong wrote: Q: Which app do you use on iOS or Android to figure out all the cellular towers and signal strengths of the cellular signal (CDMA or GSM) in your area? This is a question and initial observation for Jeff Liebermann. Why me? Does a cellular booster propagate the original cell tower identification? (Or does the boosted signal have its own cell tower identification number?) By "booster" are you referring to a bi-directional amplifier like products from Wilson: http://www.wilsonpro.com/residential-cell-phone-signal-boosters or Wi-Ex (zBoost)? https://www.signalboosters.com/zboost-signal-boosters I so, they repeat exactly the original signals both incoming and outgoing. What you hear is the tower ID. The device does not generate any new data or belch a new tower ID. However, if you're referring to a Femtocell or similar internet connected microcellular device, the answer is yes, they do have their own unique ID. My initial assumption (which needs to be tested) is two fold: a. It seems the router-connected micro tower has its own unique cell id. Yep. b. It seems the booster may simply propagate the "real" cell tower cell id. Yep. Does that make sense? Yep. How far away do you think the strongest (or nearest) T-mobile cell tower is located from your test location? Any possibility that one of your neighbors might have a T-mobile microcell box that you're hearing? I'm suspicious of the rather strong tower signal. Back of the envelope calculation: +27dBm Estimated transmit power from the cell site +10dB My guess of the panel antenna gain -53dBm Receive signal level from your test. Path loss = 27 + 10 + 53 = 90dB Calculating the distance where the path loss would be -90dB at 700MHz: http://www.proxim.com/products/knowledge-center/calculations/calculations-free-space-loss is about 0.7 miles or about 4,000 ft. The cell tower would need to be rather close to your location for that to work. Like I said, I'm suspicious of what you're measuring. -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
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On Sat, 18 Feb 2017 16:29:17 -0500, nospam wrote:
As far as anyone can tell, it's impossible to get the cell id tower from the phone on an iOS device, wrong. Certainly, technically competetent iOS users have tried over the years... http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1...ork-in-ios-5-1 https://blog.hqcodeshop.fi/archives/...Test-mode.html http://www.ahmadrifky.com/ict-stuff/...-split-seconds https://discussions.apple.com/thread...art=0&tstart=0 Even iOS app developers have tried... https://forums.developer.apple.com/thread/21018 https://sourceforge.net/p/dpfdelphiios/tickets/232/ What do you know that they don't know? |
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On Sun, 19 Feb 2017 02:31:01 -0000 (UTC), Lewis wrote:
I haven never cared to check. If I unplug the t-mbile cellspot, my signal in the basement drops significantly and I lose calls. You are perfectly correct in that simply unplugging a single micro tower will likely cause the signal strength to "fluctuate". The signal strength, however, can easily be similar since it fluctuates normally anyway, e.g., all my neighbors also have micro towers (basically everyone has them out here). Worse, when I unplug my booster, it takes about fifteen minutes for the cell signal to set itself up, and, even then, it seems that the booster simply "passes through" the cell tower ID it is boosting (I need to research that further though). So, unplugging it in order to figure out if I'm connected to it, is problematic. However far worse than that, when I unplug my router-connected micro tower, it takes multiple hours for the thing to set itself up. T-Mobile says that it can take up to two hours, but I found out that it takes even longer than that, as last night I literally fell asleep before the thing started taking on my cell phone. I had to look at the log file in the morning. BTW, for Jeff Liebermann, I found another app that logs the connections, so, that's three apps which log all the towers connected to, only one of which (NetMonitor) allows you to modify how that log appears (which is a nice feature) to the user in real time. Some logs save as text, others as CSV, so I'll write up separately for you and others to benefit, which apps were best for logging the cell tower IDs. I don't care which tower or micro tower I am connected to. Most people don't care which tower they're connected to; however, if they were debugging their connection, they'd start to care. In my case, T-Mobile only allows one device, which is what I found out when the second device tried to use the same 911 address as the first device, so, they "may" ask for one of the devices back (I had asked for a third device, but that is currently out of the question). If I have to give one device back, it is helpful to know which device worked best, and for that, waiting two or more hours between tests is crazy when I can just look at the unique cell id of the router-based device to tell if that's what I'm connecting to. So just having a decibel reading doesn't tell me *which* tower I'm connected to (since there are at least three or more to choose from). So? Who cares? If my good signal strength is actually due to my neighbor's micro tower, how would I know? If I have to send back one device to T-Mobile, which device would I send back? The good news is that my decibel readings are now in the -50dBm to -60dBm range (instead of the minus 90 to minus 100 decibel range as they were before I hooked up the micro towers!). That's all that matters. Not really. If T-Mobile wants one of their devices back, which one do I give them? |
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In article , Stijn De Jong
wrote: As far as anyone can tell, it's impossible to get the cell id tower from the phone on an iOS device, wrong. Certainly, technically competetent iOS users have tried over the years... and have succeeded: https://ociotec.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/proveedor_telefonia.png https://pbs.twimg.com/media/C29OaIVXAAEPTMG.jpg |
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In article , tlvp
wrote: the average isn't what matters. a quality app can be *very* profitable. So can a lottery ticket, and it's easier to develop. Cheers, -- tlvp whooosh. |
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On Sat, 18 Feb 2017 20:14:28 -0800, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
CellTracker: http://people.csail.mit.edu/bkph/CellTracker Nice app, but it does NOT show the lat-long of the local Verizon cell site. See attached screen grab: http://802.11junk.com/jeffl/crud/CellTracker.jpg Thanks Jeff for installing that app, which isn't on F-Droid or Google Play, so we both took a risk in doing so (I'm not sure how to ameliorate that risk, but that's the topic of a different Android thread). I've only used that MIT CellTracker for a day, so take everything below with a grain of salt but look at this screenshot first: http://i.cubeupload.com/407ihh.jpg That MIT CellTracker app does appear to list two GPS locations: 1. Where you are 2. Where the connected tower is That first GPS location it probably gets from our GPS receivers, while the second GPS (which it calls "NMAP") location is likely from a lookup database. Note from the screengrab that the GPS is on and running. The "WIFI Lat-Long" is the location of my house, not the local cell site. I don't know where my Lat-Long came from (probably Google Maps database). Sometimes it says "NMAP NOT FOUND" as your photo shows, but other times it says "NMAP" and then the GPS location and height of the tower in meters. What I don't like about this MIT CellTracker is that it reports signal strength in ASU and not in Decibels (yes, I know, it can be converted). However, what I like about this MIT CellTracker non-Google-Play app is I can see, visually, the documented cell towers bouncing around, even when I use my signal booster micro tower. Here's an edited example of what a user might see of that bouncing: http://i.cubeupload.com/ZHepme.jpg Celltracker for Android 5.0 on a Moto G v1 phone running Android 5.1. I'm on Android 4.3 Samsung Galaxy S3, T-Mobile, in the boonies near you. After two days, I've whittled down the good freeware to 4 applications: http://i.cubeupload.com/OwXjWZ.jpg |
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On 2/17/2017 8:36 PM, Savageduck wrote:
I recall driving to Yosemite in the winter one year. It was snowing. We arrived at the place we were staying and they hadn't left the key out for us. I called the caretaker who brought over the key. Was this at Fish Camp, and I guess at some place other than Tenaya Lodge or the Narrow Gauge Inn? Yosemite West. I looked at the maps for all four carriers for that area. Only Verizon has coverage there. Remember, this area used to be served by a local carrier, Golden State Cellular, which did a very good job of covering remote areas. Verizon bought them. T-Mobile has no coverage in Yosemite, not even in Yosemite Valley, and does not allow roaming. Sprint roams onto Verizon. AT&T has native coverage in Yosemite Valley. Oddly, the AT&T map shows two small patches of coverage. Yosemite West is technically just outside the park boundary but the only access is from within the park. There are a lot of rental houses and condominiums in that community so it's a popular area for lodging, especially in the winter since it's much closer to the downhill ski area and the majority of XC and snowshoe trails, than Yosemite Valley, Wawona, or Fish Camp. Throughout California, once you leave the urban and suburban areas, you definitely want to have at least an AT&T phone, and preferably a Verizon phone. Ditto for Oregon. We were up in Bend and out in the area west of town at Tumalo Falls, and there was only Verizon coverage (probably also U.S. Cellular coverage). T-Mobile coverage is very spotty. Part of the problem of course is the PCS frequencies need a lot more towers to cover the same area as the cellular frequencies. Another advantage of Verizon is that their using CDMA which is more robust and has greater range. |
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On Sun, 19 Feb 2017 17:18:40 +0000 (UTC), Stijn De Jong
wrote: That first GPS location it probably gets from our GPS receivers, while the second GPS (which it calls "NMAP") location is likely from a lookup database. It's MMAP, not NMAP. MMAP (Mobile Message Access Protocol) is a protocol for sending SMS messages over the internet: http://www.phonescoop.com/glossary/term.php?gid=269 https://yidonghan.wordpress.com/2008/01/02/mobile-message-access-protocolmmap-version-1-0/ http://xml.coverpages.org/SMS-MMAPv12a.pdf -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
#113
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On Sun, 19 Feb 2017 09:41:15 -0800, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
It's MMAP, not NMAP. MMAP (Mobile Message Access Protocol) is a protocol for sending SMS messages over the internet: http://www.phonescoop.com/glossary/term.php?gid=269 https://yidonghan.wordpress.com/2008/01/02/mobile-message-access-protocolmmap-version-1-0/ http://xml.coverpages.org/SMS-MMAPv12a.pdf Oooops. My eyes! They suck! That's the main reason I wish the iOS iPads could do some of this stuff. I can't *see* the little screen on my S3! Thanks. I appreciate the correction. Another thing I appreciate is that you researched the NetMonitor app, which does logs *better* than all the other apps did! a. NetMonitor logs are the most customizable http://i.cubeupload.com/ZAcsok.jpg b. GSM Signal Monitoring has great csv logs http://i.cubeupload.com/69bgcS.jpg b. CellTracker logs manually (by pressing the blue arrows) http://i.cubeupload.com/FhY2UX.jpg They all do logs differently though; but what I like about NetMonitor logs is that you can *change* how the site appears in the real-time log. So, for example, if a site shows up in NetMonitor originally as: 12345 54321 6789 California, USA, Santa Cruz, CA 95060 You can change that to something that makes sense to you, such as: 12345 54321 6789 1555 Soquel Dr. tower, north facing alpha sector Or even just the one line: 1555 Soquel Dr. tower, north facing alpha sector And, in all subsequent logs (real time or post mortem), it will show up that way for you (or so it seems) with an asterisk in front (it seems). In summary, all three apps listed above do logs differently, but the app you suggested for logging does them the best because they're just a bunch of numbers if you can't change them to indicate something more meaningful to you (such as the sector or the street location) in real time. |
#114
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On Sat, 18 Feb 2017 19:48:00 -0800, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
http://www.evdoforums.com/thread15374.html I dialed #878# and got: "Welcome to Verizon Wireless. Your call cannot be completed as dialed..." I got a similar message, but for T-Mobile (your call cannot be completed as dialed, or something like that). But I didn't know if it was just T-Mobile or not. Thanks for running that test for Verizon. There is a way to tell which sector antenna you're connected to from the cell id. Also, the newer Android APIs now seem to expose the frequency bands: http://people.csail.mit.edu/bkph/cel...r_inside.shtml Nice article. I think there is a way of extracting the sector but I don't know what it might be and am too lazy to work it out right now. My leaky roof and irate customers come first. Speaking of leaky roofs, I can't believe the rain we've been having! I am sick and tired of rain, mudslides, & road closures near the summit! We're getting a windy storm tomorrow too! (Brace yourself!). I have completed my initial tests on the Android free apps though. I know I'm done with the first phase when I've uninstalled all the apps that irk me. I'm left with these four, each of which does something nice that the others don't do as well. https://i.cubeupload.com/vKLAu8.jpg While some of these apps do wifi scanning, I keep a separate folder for the best freeware wifi scanners, as shown below: https://i.cubeupload.com/Z1qvPZ.jpg If folks want to save time, you can't go wrong loading just one or more of those four best freeware apps (in my tests anyway) for cellular debugging. Network Cell Info Lite, version 3.30: http://i.cubeupload.com/HoKTav.jpg http://wilysis.com/networkcellinfo https://play.google.com/store/apps/d...s.cellinfolite Netmonitor, version 1.2.15: https://i.cubeupload.com/TfDJaS.jpg https://play.google.com/store/apps/d...ene.netmonitor MIT CellTracker: http://i.cubeupload.com/ZHepme.jpg http://people.csail.mit.edu/bkph/CellTracker GSM Signal Monitoring, version 4.02: http://i.cubeupload.com/V9O0Gg.jpg https://play.google.com/store/apps/d...almonitorin g You'll also want this, but I put it in my WiFi folder instead: WiGle WiFi Wardriving (which also reports cellular towers): http://i.cubeupload.com/ZPva3O.jpg https://play.google.com/store/apps/d...e.wigleandroid Unfortunately, the freeware version of Network Signal Info crashed a lot so I uninstalled it, but if it works for you, it's also very good. Network Signal Info, version 3.63.01: http://i.cubeupload.com/2zK8Ys.jpg https://play.google.com/store/apps/d...android.telnet If you want log files, you are limited to these three, in order: a. NetMonitor logs are the most customizable http://i.cubeupload.com/ZAcsok.jpg b. GSM Signal Monitoring has great csv logs http://i.cubeupload.com/69bgcS.jpg b. CellTracker logs manually (by pressing the blue arrows) http://i.cubeupload.com/FhY2UX.jpg As always, I hope these detailed summaries and research and tests help others now, and in the future. Of course, if you have improvements, please share! |
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On Sun, 19 Feb 2017 10:43:16 -0500, nospam wrote:
As far as anyone can tell, it's impossible to get the cell id tower from the phone on an iOS device, wrong. Certainly, technically competetent iOS users have tried over the years... and have succeeded: https://ociotec.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/proveedor_telefonia.png https://pbs.twimg.com/media/C29OaIVXAAEPTMG.jpg I've seen those pictures before since they were in the references I already cited. Where is the unique cell ID in those pictures? There is only one "cell id" and it's simply the number 388, which isn't a unique cell id in any sense of the word. What do you know that nobody else on iOS knows? |
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On Sat, 18 Feb 2017 19:48:00 -0800, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
http://www.evdoforums.com/thread15374.html I dialed #878# and got: "Welcome to Verizon Wireless. Your call cannot be completed as dialed..." Same here, on the other coast, but with the additional text, "Announcement for switch [digit] [digit] [digit] dash [digit]." (Actual digits redacted to "[digit]" for privacy's sake.) Cheers, -- tlvp -- Avant de repondre, jeter la poubelle, SVP. |
#117
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In article , Stijn De Jong
wrote: As far as anyone can tell, it's impossible to get the cell id tower from the phone on an iOS device, wrong. Certainly, technically competetent iOS users have tried over the years... and have succeeded: https://ociotec.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/proveedor_telefonia.png https://pbs.twimg.com/media/C29OaIVXAAEPTMG.jpg I've seen those pictures before since they were in the references I already cited. yet you still claim it can't be done?? Where is the unique cell ID in those pictures? There is only one "cell id" and it's simply the number 388, which isn't a unique cell id in any sense of the word. nonsense. What do you know that nobody else on iOS knows? i don't know about 'nobody else' but it's clear as hell that i know way the **** more than you do. |
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On Sat, 18 Feb 2017 23:13:31 -0800, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
This is a question and initial observation for Jeff Liebermann. Why me? Good question. I guess it's because I've seen so much made-up stuff from the likes of nospam, that you're one of the few people here we can trust. Does a cellular booster propagate the original cell tower identification? (Or does the boosted signal have its own cell tower identification number?) By "booster" are you referring to a bi-directional amplifier like products from Wilson. T-mobile gives out a signal booster where you put on unit in the window and another unit in the middle of the house. https://support.t-mobile.com/docs/DOC-14947 It's supposed to "boost" the signal. https://support.t-mobile.com/communi...signal-booster If so, they repeat exactly the original signals both incoming and outgoing. What you hear is the tower ID. The device does not generate any new data or belch a new tower ID. I think this is the case that the signal booster passes through the original tower ID since I don't see any *new* tower ids when I hook up the signal booster. Of course, it could just be that the signal booster isn't working because the signal strength doesn't get any better either. However, if you're referring to a Femtocell or similar internet connected microcellular device, the answer is yes, they do have their own unique ID. I do have a femtocell also, and that *does* have its own unique ID which I have identified already. https://support.t-mobile.com/communi...g-lte-cellspot So the question was just about whether the booster generates its own unique cell id or if it just passes through the cell ID of a tower somewhere in Santa Cruz or San Jose. My initial assumption (which needs to be tested) is two fold: a. It seems the router-connected micro tower has its own unique cell id. Yep. b. It seems the booster may simply propagate the "real" cell tower cell id. Yep. Does that make sense? Yep. Thanks. That made sense. By the way, long ago you helped me set up a Linksys WRT54G as a wired extender (yes, you cautioned against it in favor of better solutions). Do you think it makes a difference if I hook up the femtocell to the wired extender versus the main router? How far away do you think the strongest (or nearest) T-mobile cell tower is located from your test location? The nearest tower is only a couple of miles away, but consistently I get connected to towers that are ten and fifteen miles away. They bounce around as I watch them from the MIT CellTracker app. Any possibility that one of your neighbors might have a T-mobile microcell box that you're hearing? I'm suspicious of the rather strong tower signal. Without the booster and without the femtocell, I get horrid signal, roughly minus 90 to minus 105 decibels. With the femtocell, I get minus 60 decibels consistently. I can even have stronger cellular signal strength than wifi signal strength, which is amazing. And, yes, *all* my neighbors have either a booster or a femtocell or they use WiFi calling (since bad signal is ubiquitous in these hills). Back of the envelope calculation: +27dBm Estimated transmit power from the cell site +10dB My guess of the panel antenna gain -53dBm Receive signal level from your test. Path loss = 27 + 10 + 53 = 90dB Calculating the distance where the path loss would be -90dB at 700MHz: http://www.proxim.com/products/knowledge-center/calculations/calculations-free-space-loss is about 0.7 miles or about 4,000 ft. The cell tower would need to be rather close to your location for that to work. Like I said, I'm suspicious of what you're measuring. Thanks for showing me how to do the math to approximate the distance to the antenna based on the received signal strength indication. I must not have stated clearly which is that the only time I get minus sixty decibels is when the femtotower is in place, where it's only a few feet from my phone. Otherwise, I get around minus a hundred decibels, which sucks. +27dBm Estimated transmit power from the cell site +10dB My guess of the panel antenna gain -100dBm Receive signal level from your test. Path loss = 27 + 10 + 100 = 137dB At 700MHz: http://www.proxim.com/products/knowledge-center/calculations/calculations-free-space-loss Puts the antenna at about 2 miles away. There *are* antennas two miles away (and sometimes I connect to them); so the math isn't as bad as I thought. I also connect to antennas ten and fifteen miles away, but that's driving distance, so I'd have to look at the distance as the crow flies, which could be in the less-than-five-mile range. |
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On Sun, 19 Feb 2017 15:15:07 -0500, tlvp
wrote: On Sat, 18 Feb 2017 19:48:00 -0800, Jeff Liebermann wrote: http://www.evdoforums.com/thread15374.html I dialed #878# and got: "Welcome to Verizon Wireless. Your call cannot be completed as dialed..." Same here, on the other coast, but with the additional text, "Announcement for switch [digit] [digit] [digit] dash [digit]." (Actual digits redacted to "[digit]" for privacy's sake.) Cheers, -- tlvp I tried it again and got the same thing as you ending in "Announcement for switch 40-6". 40 is the SID (system identifier) for the San Francisco Bay area: http://www.roamingzone.com/sid/ http://ifast.force.com/sid The 6 is the NID (network identifier). These numbers also agree with the local VZW tower data as displayed by the NetMonitor app. The phone is NOT activated and therefore shows everything as roaming. Operator: 310 00 (Roaming) Type: CDMA - EvDo Rev A Carrier: Verizon Wireless SID: 40 NID: 6 BID: 4864 Signal: -88dBm I have some better phones (Samsung S4(?) and S6) in my palatial office that I can try later next week. -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
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On Sun, 19 Feb 2017 20:44:18 +0000 (UTC), Stijn De Jong
wrote: On Sat, 18 Feb 2017 23:13:31 -0800, Jeff Liebermann wrote: Back of the envelope calculation: +27dBm Estimated transmit power from the cell site +10dB My guess of the panel antenna gain -53dBm Receive signal level from your test. Path loss = 27 + 10 + 53 = 90dB Calculating the distance where the path loss would be -90dB at 700MHz: http://www.proxim.com/products/knowledge-center/calculations/calculations-free-space-loss is about 0.7 miles or about 4,000 ft. The cell tower would need to be rather close to your location for that to work. Like I said, I'm suspicious of what you're measuring. Thanks for showing me how to do the math to approximate the distance to the antenna based on the received signal strength indication. Well, I screwed up a little. I left out the antenna gain of your cell phone, which I assumed to be 0dB at 700MHz. That's probably optimistic and -3dB would be more reasonable. So, the calcs should be something like: +27dBm Estimated transmit power from the cell site +10dB My guess of the tower panel antenna gain ??dB Calculated path loss -3dB My guess of the cell phone antenna gain -53dBm Receive signal level from your test. Path loss = 27 + 10 - (-3) - (-53) = 93dB Calculating the distance where the path loss would be -93dB at 700MHz: http://www.proxim.com/products/knowledge-center/calculations/calculations-free-space-loss is about 0.94 miles or about 5,000 ft. The cell tower would need to be rather close to your location or you're getting your signal from the neighbors. I must not have stated clearly which is that the only time I get minus sixty decibels is when the femtotower is in place, where it's only a few feet from my phone. The +27dBm (500mw) and +10dBm antenna gain are based on my guess(tm) of the power per carrier for a real cell tower and a typical panel antenna and with some reduction in power thanks to transmit power control. Power levels and antenna gains for DAS (distributed antenna system), small cell, microcell, picocell, analog repeaters, etc are much lower. http://www.rfwireless-world.com/Tutorials/femtocell-vs-picocell-vs-microcell.html I can build you a table for the various device that will produce more accurate results. There *are* antennas two miles away (and sometimes I connect to them); so the math isn't as bad as I thought. I also connect to antennas ten and fifteen miles away, but that's driving distance, so I'd have to look at the distance as the crow flies, which could be in the less-than-five-mile range. Also look at the antenna gains on both ends, any RF obstructions including Fresnel zone blocking, and the accuracy of the signal level meter in the cell phone. Remember, in RF real RF power, sensitivity, antenna gains, and path loss, are always worse than calculated. I don't want to comment on the T-Mobile signal booster due to lack of experience with the device and general lack of info on what's inside. If you can supply an FCC ID number, I might be able to excavate something useful from the FCC ID data dumpster. -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
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