Hi Peter, no budget, but device must be able to receive data at reasonable speed. Regards Wayne
-- Edited by AusQld on Saturday 26th of October 2019 11:32:59 AM
Knight said
09:29 AM Oct 27, 2019
I assume that most country people and travellers know that there are superior reception range mobile phones, look for the blue tick identification mark.
And even not far away, several years ago I was on my boat with my son visiting friends who had a waterfront holiday home on the Hawkesbury River north of Sydney, my son tried to phone them to advise when we expected to arrive but his phone had no signal. He used my blue tick country phone with no problem.
Mike Harding said
01:22 PM Oct 27, 2019
There is no definitive answer to your question there is only a subjective one and that may change with each passing shower, phase of the moon or the density of the local trees.
Mobile phone boosters are generally only of any use to people in a fixed location (usually their home) who can also erect a good yagi antenna in the best spot and point it in the correct direction.
The last time I checked the only legal boosters were sold by the major service providers and A$1500 sticks in mind as a price. And (not directed at the OP) don't even *think* of using a non certified one from e-bay etc the ACMA *will* hunt you down and prosecute. Unqualified transmitters in the mobile bands are very high on their list of search and destroy devices and they do have some excellent direction finding gear - think multi station time-of-arrival coupled receivers - can't hide from that.
There's not much which can be done to improve the mobile coverage situation (else I'd have done it). It's almost (is?) impossible to find a phone with an external antenna socket and although I have a USB modem with such and a 13 element yagi it really doesn't help with data speed worth a damn in marginal coverage areas.
"Blue Tick"? Yeah, maybe, perhaps; the last I heard was if the bloke in the test labs who did the Blue Tick certification was off work then no certification could be done because to use another individual to hold the phone during testing changed the antenna impedance such that the tests were not repeatable... which is what I would expect. RF at 1GHz and above has a deal of black magic associated with it.
Essentially: if you want to go serious bush in Australia forget mobile phone - HF radio works anywhere but has very low bandwidth, satellite phones work most places, have variable but decent bandwidth (although rotten latency) and will cost you a fortune to run. I use Amateur Radio HF for voice comms and e-mail and leave web surfing until I'm in mobile range.
Craig1 said
04:50 PM Oct 27, 2019
Telstra were advertising a " booster " themselves about 2 weeks ago, look them up on official website of telstra
outlaw40 said
06:48 PM Oct 27, 2019
I think you will find that the cel-fi units are the only booster you can legally use in australia.
Burga said
10:31 AM Oct 28, 2019
As post above, the only certified legal booster is the Cel-fi go. These can be had for around $900, cheapest ive found is $845 on the net. 12v powered unit with external antenna to recieve signal and small flat antenna for inside of vehicle. This basically turns your vehicle into a hotspot. You must however have a signal to start with for the unit to work. Generally 1 bar will be boosted to nearly full if not full signal. I have been looking for sometime but just havent pulled the trigger due to cost
Burga said
10:33 AM Oct 28, 2019
https://cel-fi.com.au
Hope this helps
Peter_n_Margaret said
11:16 AM Oct 28, 2019
I posted a link to another forum discussion on this subject. In that discussion I posted a pic of what we do.
This is a "Kelly pole" telescopic fishing pole.
The modem or 'phone hot spot is attached to the top and a weak signal can become quite usable for data.
What is the best legal Mobile phone booster.
www.exploroz.com/forum/139229/anyone-used-a-phone-booster
Cheers,
Peter
Hi Peter, no budget, but device must be able to receive data at reasonable speed. Regards Wayne
-- Edited by AusQld on Saturday 26th of October 2019 11:32:59 AM
And even not far away, several years ago I was on my boat with my son visiting friends who had a waterfront holiday home on the Hawkesbury River north of Sydney, my son tried to phone them to advise when we expected to arrive but his phone had no signal. He used my blue tick country phone with no problem.
There is no definitive answer to your question there is only a subjective one and that may change with each passing shower, phase of the moon or the density of the local trees.
Mobile phone boosters are generally only of any use to people in a fixed location (usually their home) who can also erect a good yagi antenna in the best spot and point it in the correct direction.
The last time I checked the only legal boosters were sold by the major service providers and A$1500 sticks in mind as a price. And (not directed at the OP) don't even *think* of using a non certified one from e-bay etc the ACMA *will* hunt you down and prosecute. Unqualified transmitters in the mobile bands are very high on their list of search and destroy devices and they do have some excellent direction finding gear - think multi station time-of-arrival coupled receivers - can't hide from that.
There's not much which can be done to improve the mobile coverage situation (else I'd have done it). It's almost (is?) impossible to find a phone with an external antenna socket and although I have a USB modem with such and a 13 element yagi it really doesn't help with data speed worth a damn in marginal coverage areas.
"Blue Tick"? Yeah, maybe, perhaps; the last I heard was if the bloke in the test labs who did the Blue Tick certification was off work then no certification could be done because to use another individual to hold the phone during testing changed the antenna impedance such that the tests were not repeatable... which is what I would expect. RF at 1GHz and above has a deal of black magic associated with it.
Essentially: if you want to go serious bush in Australia forget mobile phone - HF radio works anywhere but has very low bandwidth, satellite phones work most places, have variable but decent bandwidth (although rotten latency) and will cost you a fortune to run. I use Amateur Radio HF for voice comms and e-mail and leave web surfing until I'm in mobile range.
I posted a link to another forum discussion on this subject.
In that discussion I posted a pic of what we do.
This is a "Kelly pole" telescopic fishing pole.
The modem or 'phone hot spot is attached to the top and a weak signal can become quite usable for data.
Costs about $25.
https://www.ebay.com.au/itm/263294675308
Cheers,
Peter
Thank you Mike for taking the time to reply. regards wayne.
Thanks Pete,
Thanks Burga.
Thanks Craig.
Thanks outlaw- agree must be legal.
Thanks Knight.