📡 Elevate Your Connectivity – Because Every Signal Counts!
The Cell Phone Signal Booster enhances 4G LTE and 5G signals for Verizon and AT&T, covering up to 4,500 square feet. With advanced features like Automatic Gain Control and high-gain antennas, it ensures optimal performance for multiple users. FCC approved and backed by a 5-year warranty, this booster is the ultimate solution for reliable cellular connectivity.
Color | Black |
Compatible Devices | Smartphone |
Frequency Bands Supported | Band 12, 13, 17 |
Connector Type Used on Cable | N-female |
Range | 4500 Square Feet |
Frequency Band Class | Dual-Band |
Frequency | 700 MHz |
Item Dimensions D x W x H | 3.94"D x 5.91"W x 11.81"H |
Item Weight | 4.6 Pounds |
W**.
Absolutely worth it for better cell signal.
My business is in a small town of <2,000 people, in a rural area. Verizon used to have great service in our area. Actually, they were the only provider with any real cell service here. Sprint and AT&T barely worked at all. Until 2021. Apparently AT&T won some federal contract to provide nationwide 911 service. When that happened Verizon just gave up in our area. Now AT&T cell service, even 5G, is available here. Sprint and T-Mobile are still a no-go. I can't effectively describe my loathing of anything AT&T. Verizon still kinda works here, so I stuck with them hoping they would not completely abandon us rural customers. About 1 in 5 Americans live in rural areas (<5,000 people in an area) after all.I purchased this signal booster hoping to get stronger cell service for our business location. Our business line is a cell phone. After doing some research it seemed these systems worked best with some vertical separation between the inside and outdoor antennas. The outside antenna was mounted on a piece of EMT conduit on the back of our building, putting the antenna about 15ft above grade. The inside antenna was installed at chest height. As soon as everything was connected and plugged in, we had an immediately stronger signal on our Verizon phones. The phones used to have 2, occasionally 3 bars. Just enough to be mostly reliable with decent call quality. Now, we consistently have 4-5 bars of service. Our calls don't get dropped anymore. I don't have to wonder if it's poor cell service on our end when I have a muddled or broken conversation with a customer on the phone. This booster was a real game changer. If you are in an area with borderline cell service, you need one of these. It helps our in-store customers with AT&T phones as well.This booster does not help with wireless internet. I knew this before I purchased it. Cell signal boosters and 4G/5G boosters are different because the signals are different. The FCC has really muddied the waters on 4G/5G boosters. We still have terrible wireless internet with Verizon phones. I have wifi and high speed internet, so it's fine 99% of the time. On the rare occasions when our cable internet goes down, it would be great to be able to use my phone's hot-spot feature to get us by until the internet service returned. My phone has the little LTE symbol on it. Too bad it doesn't mean anything. It's ok for general web browsing. Better than 3G. You're not going to be streaming videos though. And it's even slower somehow as a hot-spot. Dial-up slow. If this company offered a 4G LTE or 5G booster, I would purchase it in a hot minute. I plan on looking for a mobile cell booster and mobile/stationary 5G boosters as well.
A**R
Installation requires care in placement, otherwise setup is very easy and device works fantastic!
My house, and my entire neighborhood, seems to be in a cell phone reception Bermuda triangle. I have at least two towers within a mile or two, yet I could barely capture 2 bars most of the time inside my house, and often less, depending on which room I was in. And forget cell reception in the basement! My wife was having difficulty sending and receiving texts, our connections were so poor.After years of frustration, I finally heard about “cell boosters” or “cell extenders”. It turns out there are two types. One type, the network extender, works off of an existing internet connection, and it is provider-specific. So for instance, if you have an AT&T cell subscription like I do, you would need an AT&T internet network extender.The other type is a network booster or cell booster. This one takes whatever signal is coming from a cell tower and amplifies, or boosts it, inside your house. This one works with all providers. I decided I wanted to provide a better signal for all providers, so our guests would benefit, as well. Therefore, I chose a cell booster.This particular model I am reviewing appeared to be the most economical of those I could find. After ordering, I eagerly awaited its arrival. It came nicely boxed, with all parts necessary for installation. The kit provides U-bolts suitable for mounting the external receiving antenna on a pole. The pole is not provided, but that was not an issue for me with my intended mounting location.My house is two stories, plus a basement. I decided to test the whole setup first by simply mounting the external antenna in an upstairs, south-facing window, pointing nearly due east at the nearest cell antenna. After running the cable down the stairs to the main floor, I stood up the internal broadcast antenna at about waist height and plugged in the amplifier. Excellent, 2 green lights! I was able to boost from maybe -115 dB to maybe -100 dB, but only in a very short radius around the broadcast antenna. And it was necessary to point the internal antenna in kind of a funny angle to avoid a feedback situation with the external antenna, as indicated by a red light on the amplifier. The coverage within the main floor with that angle was not ideal.So I moved the external antenna to a north-facing window, pointed nearly due north at another antenna only about a mile away. This gave me a much better angle of coverage within the main floor of the house for the internal antenna. I was also able to tweak the direction of the external antenna and gain or lose 5-20 dB of boost, simply with better or worse signal reception. But I would still get feedback once in a while, especially at higher boost numbers.At this point, I was still not sure this whole system was really going to be worth the trouble. I was getting some boost, but only in a limited semicircular zone in half of my main floor. And the feedback was troublesome. To be fair, the installation instructions do stress that vertical separation of the two antennas is very important, and my test setup was not really providing much of that. I only had about 8 ft of vertical separation, and about 30 feet of horizontal separation.In the end, I decided I had just enough boost to give it a try for real. My plan was to mount the external antenna in the attic, facing north at the cell tower I tested for the second try. So I spent a whole day crawling around in the attic, mounting the antenna, running cables, drilling holes through walls to get the cable to where I wanted the internal antenna, etc. Not necessarily difficult, but time-consuming. Finally, late in the afternoon, I had enough of the system in place, though not permanently mounted, that I could plug in the amplifier and see what I had.Wow! I mean, really wow! I was getting readings in the -70s, -80s, all over the house! Even 5 bars in the basement! I could hardly believe it. I now get pretty much 5 bars throughout the entire house. Wow! And never a hint of feedback, even with the massive boost signal.So as you can see, I was impressed. Clearly, getting the external antenna up another 15 feet gave me much better reception. And the extra 15 feet of vertical separation eliminated the feedback situation, as well.So we have been running with this for 24 hours now, and we couldn’t be happier.Here are some points that might be helpful. Most of these are in the installation instructions, but I reiterate them here for emphasis:1. Vertical separation of the antennas is very important.2. The two antennas must point away from each other.3. Experiment with how you have your external antenna pointed. Even a half of a degree difference in antenna direction, I found, could add or subtract from your performance.4. Experiment with different cell towers, if you have that option.
Trustpilot
2 months ago
2 days ago