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Advice needed on external 3G/4G antenna

1234689

Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 18,958 ✭✭✭✭Shefwedfan


    I guess higher gain will result in higher speeds? Thanks


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,161 ✭✭✭✭M5


    Shefwedfan wrote: »
    I guess higher gain will result in higher speeds? Thanks

    Better signal, and therefore better speeds. In theory!

    If you are 500m from an antenna it won't make that much, in more marginal condition the impact will be greater.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 678 ✭✭✭kevovek


    Didnt want to start a new thread for this, I was just wondering is anyone using an external antenna for the Huawei B818? I have a antenna already but it has SMA connectors and this needs TS9 so I'll need to pick up adapters somewhere. And they cant be bulky like most ive seen because the TS9 plugs on the Huawei B818 are quite close together from video reviews Ive seen. Main question is where is a good place to buy the adapters preferably somewhere Irish to save time on delivery but open to other suggestions too.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 18,958 ✭✭✭✭Shefwedfan


    kevovek wrote: »
    Didnt want to start a new thread for this, I was just wondering is anyone using an external antenna for the Huawei B818? I have a antenna already but it has SMA connectors and this needs TS9 so I'll need to pick up adapters somewhere. And they cant be bulky like most ive seen because the TS9 plugs on the Huawei B818 are quite close together from video reviews Ive seen. Main question is where is a good place to buy the adapters preferably somewhere Irish to save time on delivery but open to other suggestions too.


    Whats the SMA one you have now? selling it? :-)


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 678 ✭✭✭kevovek


    Not sure if your talking about the antenna or the router but I'm going to hold on to both of them anyway, if I happen to be doing some heavy duty downloading a particular month Id like to keep my B315s which is on the three network as a back up.


  • Registered Users Posts: 930 ✭✭✭Daz_


    kevovek wrote: »
    Didnt want to start a new thread for this, I was just wondering is anyone using an external antenna for the Huawei B818? I have a antenna already but it has SMA connectors and this needs TS9 so I'll need to pick up adapters somewhere. And they cant be bulky like most ive seen because the TS9 plugs on the Huawei B818 are quite close together from video reviews Ive seen. Main question is where is a good place to buy the adapters preferably somewhere Irish to save time on delivery but open to other suggestions too.

    I’m in contact with Cell Net at the moment via email as I’m thinking of getting an LTE antenna for my mobile broadband .

    They have been great so far dealing with my questions about it etc. guess they might have accessories .


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 966 ✭✭✭heffo500


    kevovek wrote: »
    Didnt want to start a new thread for this, I was just wondering is anyone using an external antenna for the Huawei B818? I have a antenna already but it has SMA connectors and this needs TS9 so I'll need to pick up adapters somewhere. And they cant be bulky like most ive seen because the TS9 plugs on the Huawei B818 are quite close together from video reviews Ive seen. Main question is where is a good place to buy the adapters preferably somewhere Irish to save time on delivery but open to other suggestions too.

    Let me know if you go ahead with this and how much your speed improves by.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 540 ✭✭✭dos29


    kevovek wrote: »
    Didnt want to start a new thread for this, I was just wondering is anyone using an external antenna for the Huawei B818? I have a antenna already but it has SMA connectors and this needs TS9 so I'll need to pick up adapters somewhere. And they cant be bulky like most ive seen because the TS9 plugs on the Huawei B818 are quite close together from video reviews Ive seen. Main question is where is a good place to buy the adapters preferably somewhere Irish to save time on delivery but open to other suggestions too.

    https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0776L8VCQ/ref=cm_sw_r_wa_apa_i_DteVEbT5GJE6J


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 190 ✭✭TMC99


    Kalyke wrote: »
    Got this this morning. So far so good but will give it a good test at the weekend. Out of the box the interface menu was in Chinese. I messed up, reset the router and now the menu is in English!

    Sorry to drag up an old one, but how did this perform for you? Are the antennas detachable?
    Looking at getting one myself


  • Registered Users Posts: 930 ✭✭✭Daz_


    I got a directional antenna 4G antenna and it didnt improve my speeds at all .
    Also would recommend avoiding a company called satelliteTV iE . wouldn’t take the product back under any circumstances .


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,230 ✭✭✭smuggler.ie


    Daz_ wrote: »
    I got a directional antenna 4G antenna and it didnt improve my speeds at all.
    What have you got? link?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,295 ✭✭✭Kalyke


    TMC99 wrote: »
    Sorry to drag up an old one, but how did this perform for you? Are the antennas detachable?
    Looking at getting one myself
    It works great. I use it indoors. The antennas are detachable.


  • Registered Users Posts: 953 ✭✭✭oppiuy


    I just purchase this today and am wondering does it help with mobile phone signal for calls or is it just broadband signal


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 589 ✭✭✭n1st


    Hi,
    I'm late to this thread.

    The coverage suggest Vodafone coverage is Good, however inside the house it's just 1 bar.
    https://coveragemap.comreg.ie/map?location=53.549539,-8.1204&technology=4g&network=vodafone&place_id=ChIJaQfbDF85XEgRpHUBXqYpCa0


    Could a 4G Antenna work for us?

    Can one be mounted externally on the chimney for example to improve the signal?


    4G for use for work purposes, email etc, not streaming movies or gaming.

    Thanks,


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,230 ✭✭✭smuggler.ie


    n1st wrote: »
    Hi,
    I'm late to this thread.

    The coverage suggest Vodafone coverage is Good, however inside the house it's just 1 bar.
    https://coveragemap.comreg.ie/map?location=53.549539,-8.1204&technology=4g&network=vodafone&place_id=ChIJaQfbDF85XEgRpHUBXqYpCa0


    Could a 4G Antenna work for us?

    Can one be mounted externally on the chimney for example to improve the signal?


    4G for use for work purposes, email etc, not streaming movies or gaming.

    Thanks,
    It should
    For Vodafone:
    North-West site ~4km and North-East site ~3.5km are 3G only:
    https://siteviewer.comreg.ie/#site/RN048/53.5740277085/-8.1623344764/1/Site%20RN048
    https://siteviewer.comreg.ie/#site/RN028/53.5717370748/-8.0826116562/1/Site%20RN028

    South-East site ~5km is 4G(LTE)
    https://siteviewer.comreg.ie/#site/RN050/53.5139017122/-8.0698375278/1/Site%20RN050


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 190 ✭✭TMC99


    Kalyke wrote: »
    It works great. I use it indoors. The antennas are detachable.

    Thanks for that, do you know what type of antenna connector it has, tried to see on their site but its not shown


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,295 ✭✭✭Kalyke


    Will check it out.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 540 ✭✭✭SmashingPilot


    Hi,

    I'm looking for more information on wether a 4G antenna will be useful for my situation.

    We have a holiday home in Rosslare and would like to get some wifi there. The ideal solution would be a PAYG provider such as Three. However, the phone signal in the house is so poor with most providers, have tried eir, Vodafone and Three. Eir have probably been the best in terms of signal.

    The following masts are closest to the house, only a 2 minute walk away but signal is still so poor:
    https://siteviewer.comreg.ie/#site/3_WX0015/52.2748260651/-6.3874976484/1/Site%203_WX0015

    According to the coverage map on their website, Three should have 4G signal there.

    So my question is, would an external 4G antenna pick up a strong enough signal to be useful? Or what's the best way to go about testing this?

    EDIT: I've used the comreg coverage map now and it seems GoMo (Eir) do indeed have the best coverage (Very Good), followed by Three (Good) and then Vodafone (Fringe).


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,145 ✭✭✭paddy19


    Hi,

    I'm looking for more information on wether a 4G antenna will be useful for my situation.

    We have a holiday home in Rosslare and would like to get some wifi there. The ideal solution would be a PAYG provider such as Three. However, the phone signal in the house is so poor with most providers, have tried eir, Vodafone and Three. Eir have probably been the best in terms of signal.

    The following masts are closest to the house, only a 2 minute walk away but signal is still so poor:
    https://siteviewer.comreg.ie/#site/3_WX0015/52.2748260651/-6.3874976484/1/Site%203_WX0015

    According to the coverage map on their website, Three should have 4G signal there.

    So my question is, would an external 4G antenna pick up a strong enough signal to be useful? Or what's the best way to go about testing this?

    EDIT: I've used the comreg coverage map now and it seems GoMo (Eir) do indeed have the best coverage (Very Good), followed by Three (Good) and then Vodafone (Fringe).

    GoMo and Eir are the same from a signal point of view.

    So best to get a free Eir sim and test coverage using your phone.
    https://www.eir.ie/mobile/prepay/free-sim-cards/

    There are several apps you can use to measure signal strength.
    Take a wander inside and outside to see where is the best spot for a good signal.
    Line of sight to the mast helps.
    If you really want to get into this have a look at Sean's site.
    https://editorsean.com/articles/3g4g-mobile-broadband-antenna-troubleshooting/

    He's the man on 4g!
    If that works halfway well you can order a GoMo sim.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 36,170 ✭✭✭✭ED E


    Hi,

    I'm looking for more information on wether a 4G antenna will be useful for my situation.

    We have a holiday home in Rosslare and would like to get some wifi there. The ideal solution would be a PAYG provider such as Three. However, the phone signal in the house is so poor with most providers, have tried eir, Vodafone and Three. Eir have probably been the best in terms of signal.

    The following masts are closest to the house, only a 2 minute walk away but signal is still so poor:
    https://siteviewer.comreg.ie/#site/3_WX0015/52.2748260651/-6.3874976484/1/Site%203_WX0015

    According to the coverage map on their website, Three should have 4G signal there.

    So my question is, would an external 4G antenna pick up a strong enough signal to be useful? Or what's the best way to go about testing this?

    EDIT: I've used the comreg coverage map now and it seems GoMo (Eir) do indeed have the best coverage (Very Good), followed by Three (Good) and then Vodafone (Fringe).

    The map is a fever dream, its not based on any useable data.

    You're far better off testing yourself.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,230 ✭✭✭smuggler.ie


    The following masts are closest to the house, only a 2 minute walk away but signal is still so poor:
    https://siteviewer.comreg.ie/#site/3_WX0015/52.2748260651/-6.3874976484/1/Site%203_WX0015
    Linked site is marked as 3G only, unless it was upgraded and info on siteviewer is out of date, but that could explain poor signal - next nearest Three LTE(4G) mast is in Piercestown ~7km
    https://siteviewer.comreg.ie/#site/3_WX0104/52.2908208809/-6.4919906316/1/Site%203_WX0104
    There are closer 4G masts from other operators.
    Forcing router into 3G, in some instances gives better speeds than 4G, especially with overcrowded Three network.

    As above, real life testing would give real life results...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 540 ✭✭✭SmashingPilot


    Perfect, happy testing it myself but wanted to make sure I wasn't missing something before I head down there.
    Thanks for the advice. I'll order an eir sim too.
    Is the signal on a phone going to be the same as one of the 4G antenna?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 472 ✭✭Turbohymac


    I suppose that's given that theres internet being transmitted from the mast..I'm currently line of site near youghal with an old 02 mast and it has never been upgraded to either 3or4 g
    So if you're living near it theres brilliant 3 phone signal for calls but NO Internet
    Hopefully that's not a similar situation in rosslare


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 589 ✭✭✭n1st



    Is line of sight required?

    The house is in a valley and the masts options are on hills in the distance, I see Eir and Three are North West and Vodafone is South East, both 2km away


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,230 ✭✭✭smuggler.ie


    n1st wrote: »
    Is line of sight required?

    The house is in a valley and the masts options are on hills in the distance, I see Eir and Three are North West and Vodafone is South East, both 2km away
    LOS preferred, especially with directional antenna.

    I'm just surprised that at 2 km distance your signal is weak. Could be due to well insulated new build or thick walls of old building. Moving modem to the window or into attic could improve.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 589 ✭✭✭n1st


    LOS preferred, especially with directional antenna.

    I'm just surprised that at 2 km distance your signal is weak. Could be due to well insulated new build or thick walls of old building. Moving modem to the window or into attic could improve.
    Actually it could be 5 km.

    Yes within the house it is an issue due to walls, outside is ok, higher maybe an option


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,230 ✭✭✭smuggler.ie


    n1st wrote: »
    Actually it could be 5 km.

    Yes within the house it is an issue due to walls, outside is ok, higher maybe an option
    On google maps, locate mast in question(reference to siteviewer), right click and select "measure distance", navigate to your place, right click and select "distance to here"
    Omni-directional antenna should work either way, but signal gain is less and it'll pick signal from strongest available mast(not necessary best speed)

    For directional antenna can use same google maps and point it to known/visible reference points(crossroad, building, tree)

    Mount antenna as high as safely/securely possible, but would not recommend to exceed 10m coax cable to the modem/router due to potential signal loss on the cable.


  • Registered Users Posts: 953 ✭✭✭oppiuy


    Following this thread it looks like my best line of sight is to a 4g+ mast about 8.4kms away. is that to far to get a really good signal using an antenna


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,230 ✭✭✭smuggler.ie


    oppiuy wrote: »
    Following this thread it looks like my best line of sight is to a 4g+ mast about 8.4kms away. is that to far to get a really good signal using an antenna
    Good directional should improve signal, however, its not necessary guaranty you speed.
    Same as yourself using B525, with 3 bars at ~4km distance to the mast, with speeds fluctuate as low 50DL to high 110DL, avg 80DL/30UL, depend on weather, time and cell connected.
    Your situation could be different.


  • Registered Users Posts: 953 ✭✭✭oppiuy


    Good directional should improve signal, however, its not necessary guaranty you speed.
    Same as yourself using B525, with 3 bars at ~4km distance to the mast, with speeds fluctuate as low 50DL to high 110DL, avg 80DL/30UL, depend on weather, time and cell connected.
    Your situation could be different.

    Max i was seeing at good times was 17dl.. my Huawei q2pro mesh 3pack arrived today. Have it set up in an old xottage and its made a massive difference to coverage and speed. Currently avwrgaeing 25 when now id expext to be down around 6. Hopefully this continues and then i see an addtional increase with the antenna but id be happy with consitant 20mbs


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,230 ✭✭✭smuggler.ie


    oppiuy wrote: »
    Max i was seeing at good times was 17dl.. my Huawei q2pro mesh 3pack arrived today. Have it set up in an old xottage and its made a massive difference to coverage and speed. Currently avwrgaeing 25 when now id expext to be down around 6. Hopefully this continues and then i see an addtional increase with the antenna but id be happy with consitant 20mbs
    What about 3G only? if you happy with 20~25 - worth testing. This would be about max you can get on 3G, but could be more steady all times.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 589 ✭✭✭n1st


    What hardware do I need to enable wifi inside the house? Recommendations?


    Directional aeriel, WiFi router, 10m cable, anything else


  • Registered Users Posts: 953 ✭✭✭oppiuy


    I Had disabled the routers wifi yesterday so couldnt turn back on unless i connected via pc. Did that this morning and the signal was slower. I seem to be connected to a 4G+ mast. Speeds slowed a lot around 8pm when the chelsea game was on but was still better than i was previously getting at those times.

    So far very happy with the kit and hopefully the Antenna will give me a boost as well


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,356 ✭✭✭✭SteelyDanJalapeno


    Hi All,

    Just read this whole thread, very informative!

    I'm still a little lost thou and looking for some advice, or maybe where to start.

    The house is on the coast, in a bit of a valley as there is hills either side and even the the road in descends a bit, I've checked the Comreg site and there is masts on the other side of all the hills, closest is about 2.5km away.

    However I dont have LOS to any of these masts until I get to about 10m elevation.

    I really just dont know where to start, I see references to loads of different products and solutions in this thread, but could someone suggest something for me?

    - Currently very poor cell reception on 3 and VF inside and outside, havent tried Eir yet
    - Ideally we want to get 10Meg speeds at least in the house
    - Is there a device I can get to increase the chances of getting signal, and then be able to feed this to a router or switch?
    - Is there a device I can get aswel to improve the cell reception on our handsets, or is there something that will do both?


    Thanks in advance!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 589 ✭✭✭n1st


    Hi All,

    Just read this whole thread, very informative!

    I'm still a little lost thou and looking for some advice, or maybe where to start.

    The house is on the coast, in a bit of a valley as there is hills either side and even the the road in descends a bit, I've checked the Comreg site and there is masts on the other side of all the hills, closest is about 2.5km away.

    However I dont have LOS to any of these masts until I get to about 10m elevation.

    I really just dont know where to start, I see references to loads of different products and solutions in this thread, but could someone suggest something for me?

    - Currently very poor cell reception on 3 and VF inside and outside, havent tried Eir yet
    - Ideally we want to get 10Meg speeds at least in the house
    - Is there a device I can get to increase the chances of getting signal, and then be able to feed this to a router or switch?
    - Is there a device I can get aswel to improve the cell reception on our handsets, or is there something that will do both?


    Thanks in advance!

    Hi,

    I was in a similar situation. I got fixed up with 4G last week, now getting 21Mpbs with Three.
    This was very surprising, we could not get more than 1 bar on 3G in or around the house. Elevating an antenna to the same height of the apex of the roof and pointing in the correct direction fixed the issue.

    We used company in Mullingar, DirectTV, very good.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,356 ✭✭✭✭SteelyDanJalapeno


    n1st wrote: »
    Hi,

    I was in a similar situation. I got fixed up with 4G last week, now getting 21Mpbs with Three.
    This was very surprising, we could not get more than 1 bar on 3G in or around the house. Elevating an antenna to the same height of the apex of the roof and pointing in the correct direction fixed the issue.

    We used company in Mullingar, DirectTV, very good.

    Do you know what type of antenna it was? Did you need anything else to then redistribute the signal?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 966 ✭✭✭heffo500


    Hi All,

    Just read this whole thread, very informative!

    I'm still a little lost thou and looking for some advice, or maybe where to start.

    The house is on the coast, in a bit of a valley as there is hills either side and even the the road in descends a bit, I've checked the Comreg site and there is masts on the other side of all the hills, closest is about 2.5km away.

    However I dont have LOS to any of these masts until I get to about 10m elevation.

    I really just dont know where to start, I see references to loads of different products and solutions in this thread, but could someone suggest something for me?

    - Currently very poor cell reception on 3 and VF inside and outside, havent tried Eir yet
    - Ideally we want to get 10Meg speeds at least in the house
    - Is there a device I can get to increase the chances of getting signal, and then be able to feed this to a router or switch?
    - Is there a device I can get aswel to improve the cell reception on our handsets, or is there something that will do both?


    Thanks in advance!

    Hi

    I also live in a valley, so I wasn't sure how strong the signal would be.

    My advice would be to download speed test and get a few sim cards, get up on a ladder where you think the highest position is you could install the aerials.

    Granted you would have another 8ft would a pole from that point.

    Run the speed tests using the different operators and see what you get, you would most likely get a lot faster, but it would indicate what you can at least expect.

    I got about 12mb using my phone on the ladder, but with aerials, I get about 70 mb.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,356 ✭✭✭✭SteelyDanJalapeno


    heffo500 wrote: »
    Hi

    I also live in a valley, so I wasn't sure how strong the signal would be.

    My advice would be to download speed test and get a few sim cards, get up on a ladder where you think the highest position is you could install the aerials.

    Granted you would have another 8ft would a pole from that point.

    Run the speed tests using the different operators and see what you get, you would most likely get a lot faster, but it would indicate what you can at least expect.

    I got about 12mb using my phone on the ladder, but with aerials, I get about 70 mb.

    Cheers heffo! That sounds very promising, I'll do those experiments.

    Could you help me understand the aerial a little better? What's on the other end, a router with a sim card?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 966 ✭✭✭heffo500


    Cheers heffo! That sounds very promising, I'll do those experiments.

    Could you help me understand the aerial a little better? What's on the other end, a router with a sim card?

    I used a Huawei B525 router and bought the below aerials along with the poles and brackets:

    https://www.atcsupplies.ie/product.php?id=002979

    So you have install them like the picture on a pole and have them spaced.

    Then at the end the cables you can screw them on the router at the back.

    You access the router through your web browser and change the settings so it knows it has external aerials connected.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 589 ✭✭✭n1st


    Do you know what type of antenna it was? Did you need anything else to then redistribute the signal?

    Not sure I'll check later in the week.
    Directional antenna I think, 2 white triangular boxes on it.
    5m steel pole and bracket.
    Tplink 4G router.
    10m cable.

    We tried Eir first, then Three, then Vodafone.
    Eir and Three were similar.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 589 ✭✭✭n1st


    Cheers heffo! That sounds very promising, I'll do those experiments.

    Could you help me understand the aerial a little better? What's on the other end, a router with a sim card?

    Similar behavior for me.
    Testing with phone was different to antenna. Vodafone looked good to me on phone but antenna did not agree.

    Get a Three data SIM for 30 euro and test with that as well as Vodafone maybe.

    Moving the antenna up or down by 3ft made a huge difference too


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,356 ✭✭✭✭SteelyDanJalapeno


    Back again with more questions! Much more informed this time.

    So I think the poynting omnidirectional with a 4g router will serve me well for data in the home, but I've realised that won't help me mobile phone reception.

    So I've been looking at it seems Comreg have legalized some 2g, 3g & 4g repeaters that will amplify weak signals through another antenna.

    Some questions thou, if I go with both solutions above, what would the best implementation be?

    I could separate them both, so 1 poynting connected to 4g router, that will supply mobile broadband.

    Another external antenna connected to a repeater internally to boost cell reception, this sounds like the most basic and straight forward implementation.

    But, since the 1st solution just picks up a weak signal and pumps it straight to the router, is it possible to take the output signal from the repeater and feed this to my router instead? Giving me an amplified signal being fed to my router?

    Do repeaters have cable outputs?

    Confused


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 966 ✭✭✭heffo500


    I didn't bother with a repeater for phone reception however I would go separate and get the mobile broadband up and running first then you can use Whatsapp for a call etc


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,356 ✭✭✭✭SteelyDanJalapeno


    heffo500 wrote: »
    I didn't bother with a repeater for phone reception however I would go separate and get the mobile broadband up and running first then you can use Whatsapp for a call etc

    Cheers yeah that's a good start!

    Seems like you can't use a repeater in between an antenna and a 4g router, not sure why, seems like a good use case.


  • Registered Users Posts: 728 ✭✭✭MF290


    Very good thread.

    Is there much difference between these two styles of antennae?


    https://www.amazon.co.uk/Antenna-Adapters-OUTDOOR-suitable-Vodafone-SMA-Male-Female/dp/B07VP1LYM3/ref=sr_1_3?dchild=1&keywords=Router+Antenna+Set+LTE+Log+MIMO+4G&qid=1597678271&s=electronics&sr=1-3

    https://www.amazon.co.uk/Poynting-4G-XPOL-A0002-Polarised-Directional-Outdoor/dp/B00C1DGGKC/ref=sr_1_19?dchild=1&keywords=Router+Antenna+4g&qid=1597678743&s=electronics&sr=1-19

    I'm planning on putting it on the roof beside a tv aerial facing the nearer of the two masts (2nd photo) which will hopefully be ok with the elevation of the cell tower and aerial.
    t2o9wJE.png
    gWoUAdZ.png

    There's a third tower 10km with good elevation also, would a MIMO antenna be any addition in this situation?
    The best signal seems to come from the first tower based off personal hotspot on the phone.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 966 ✭✭✭heffo500


    MF290 wrote: »
    Very good thread.

    Is there much difference between these two styles of antennae?


    https://www.amazon.co.uk/Antenna-Adapters-OUTDOOR-suitable-Vodafone-SMA-Male-Female/dp/B07VP1LYM3/ref=sr_1_3?dchild=1&keywords=Router+Antenna+Set+LTE+Log+MIMO+4G&qid=1597678271&s=electronics&sr=1-3

    https://www.amazon.co.uk/Poynting-4G-XPOL-A0002-Polarised-Directional-Outdoor/dp/B00C1DGGKC/ref=sr_1_19?dchild=1&keywords=Router+Antenna+4g&qid=1597678743&s=electronics&sr=1-19

    I'm planning on putting it on the roof beside a tv aerial facing the nearer of the two masts (2nd photo) which will hopefully be ok with the elevation of the cell tower and aerial.
    t2o9wJE.png
    gWoUAdZ.png

    There's a third tower 10km with good elevation also, would a MIMO antenna be any addition in this situation?
    The best signal seems to come from the first tower based off personal hotspot on the phone.


    Those aerials seem quite expensive, where are you based?

    I got mine and it about €110 Inc vat and delivery.

    TRANS-DATA LTE KYZ 10/10 MIMO 4G/3G/GSM Antenna (with 10 m cable SMA)


  • Registered Users Posts: 728 ✭✭✭MF290


    Ireland, They should be similar enough in price. The log type in the link is 99 pound with free delivery about 110 euro.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 946 ✭✭✭daraghwal


    My brother is living in a caravan on a college placement for the next year. Outside there is 3 bars Vodafone 4g coverage but nothing inside the caravan. What is the best setup to basically either get WiFi in the mobile via Vodafone 4g with some sort of an antenna on a temporary pole on a €20/month sim or boost the signal to his phone and use as a hotspot. Are there any relatively cheap ways to do this?

    Would something as simple as this be good enough? https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B07VKRBGQ7/ref=cm_sw_r_tw_dp_x_YBHxFbHRKB82S

    I have a spare huawei device like the one pictured


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 36,170 ✭✭✭✭ED E


    LTE router inside, small antenna outside and some kind of weathersealing to get the cable out. Easy enough. Should investigate all providers for coverage first.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 946 ✭✭✭daraghwal


    ED E wrote: »
    LTE router inside, small antenna outside and some kind of weathersealing to get the cable out. Easy enough. Should investigate all providers for coverage first.

    Perfect. So huawei mobile WiFi dongle plugged directly into an outdoor antenna mounted on the caravan where the best coverage is. Could you recommend an antenna or is the one I have linked above suitable? One with the suction cups would be preferrable if possible as it’s a temp solution but if there are better relatively cheap antennas available we’d work around that.

    Vodafone is the only network with decent 4g in the area


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