Cellular booster

bosco

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Dec 21, 2008
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Des Moines
Does anyone have experience with devices that boost your cell signal? Recently moved to a home in the country and our phone signal is spotty at best. Do these really work or are we better off getting a land line?
 

cytech

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Apr 10, 2006
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Not sure what your carrier is but sprint has a device you plug into your internet connection at home that will allow you to get unlimited calls and data while using it. Think it cost like 50-80 bucks and $5 a month to add it to your bill. Other carriers may offer something similar as well.
 
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bosco

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Dec 21, 2008
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Not sure what your carrier is but sprint has a device you plug into your internet connection at home that will allow you to get unlimited calls and data while using it. Think it cost like 50-80 bucks and $5 a month to add it to your bill. Other carriers may offer something similar as well.

We use Verizon. Not sure if they offer this.
 

acgclone

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Feb 21, 2007
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Yes I use a Verizon network extender and it works extremely well. I think I paid around $100the for it and I would highly recommend it
 
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alarson

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Came to this thread thinking it was about those things to stick on your phone that were supposed to increase your reception, that nobody has tried to sell since about 1998
 

1100011CS

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Oct 5, 2007
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Marshalltown
We use Verizon. Not sure if they offer this.

Yes, Verizon has these and they wok well if you have an Internet connection. I was looking for a solution to boost my signal at the lake (southwest Iowa) where we don't have Internet and Verizon coverage sucks. I tried a Wilson Electronics booster that I paid close to $200 for and it does absolutely nothing. They are a total scam.
 
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TykeClone

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Oct 18, 2006
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Do you have any experience with any of these? Do they actually work?

We have a steel roof at work and some cell companies were inaccessible. We installed a small repeater thing like these that supported two frequencies and it works well for two of the main carriers in the area.

I don't have information on which one we installed - PM me if you'd like me to look it up.
 

LegendaryTRX

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Sep 20, 2011
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Switch to US Cellular, all your signal problems in the state of Iowa will be solved. I live in the middle of ******* no where, the nearest Walmart is a 30 minute drive, the nearest town has 300 people in it. Plus I live in a valley, and I always have full bars.
 

1100011CS

Well-Known Member
Oct 5, 2007
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Marshalltown
Switch to US Cellular, all your signal problems in the state of Iowa will be solved. I live in the middle of ******* no where, the nearest Walmart is a 30 minute drive, the nearest town has 300 people in it. Plus I live in a valley, and I always have full bars.

I'm not on Verizon by choice.
 

bosco

Well-Known Member
Dec 21, 2008
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Des Moines
Yes, Verizon has these and they wok well if you have an Internet connection. I was looking for a solution to boost my signal at the lake (southwest Iowa) where we don't have Internet and Verizon coverage sucks. I tried a Wilson Electronics booster that I paid close to $200 for and it does absolutely nothing. They are a total scam.

I was leaning towards one of those but wondered how effective they were. Thanks for the heads up.

Yes I use a Verizon network extender and it works extremely well. I think I paid around $100the for it and I would highly recommend it

I decided to go this route. Pretty pricey. $250 off of their website. There were a lot of positive reviews of it though. If it works as well as they claim it'll be worth every penny.
 
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acgclone

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Feb 21, 2007
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I was leaning towards one of those but wondered how effective they were. Thanks for the heads up.



I decided to go this route. Pretty pricey. $250 off of their website. There were a lot of positive reviews of it though. If it works as well as they claim it'll be worth every penny.

To add a little to my previous comment now that I have some time, I think I paid $200 for the network extender but there was a $100 rebate, IIRC.

Basically, as long as your wifi is working, you'll have a crystal clear in your house.

The only problem you can encounter, is that you are not able to switch from the extender to regular service during a call. So if you're on your phone and are leaving your house, you will drop the call as you leave the extender's range, and have to call the person back when you switch over to cell coverage.
 

CLONECONES

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Mar 15, 2012
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Came to this thread thinking it was about those things to stick on your phone that were supposed to increase your reception, that nobody has tried to sell since about 1998

16810-signal_booster.jpg


I don't see how these didn't sell millions of units
 

twistedredbird

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Apr 26, 2008
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for those that have Sprint, they provide their booster the Airrave for free if you have trouble with signal in your home of office. 5 bars inside the house.
 

TykeClone

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Oct 18, 2006
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