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Mobile Phone Range In Australia
Corrections Welcome
Corrections Welcome. I'm a computer
systems engineer, but never worked on mobile phones, I've
discussed bits of this with GSM engineers
who put me on to the double time slot, but this page is Not
authoritative, & needs more clickable reference URLs.
One major contibution/ extension I've received is at
end.
Someone travelling the largely un-populated West Australian
coast hundreds of kilometres north of Perth wrote in Oct. 2002,
Re. their Nokia 3310 mobile phone, & using it for
email:
"Most of the time we are travelling, there is no signal at
all."
These notes were to help & explain:
- It's a big empty country ! Mobile phone signals dont
propagate that far, & need more transmitter masts than are
installed, I guess. (There were dead spots even in highly
populated Germany in 2001)
- Some Range Limitations Are:
- Which Phone Company
- GSM Signal Slot Timing
- Signal Strength
- Modem Speed
- Frequencies
Which Phone Company
- Not all net suppliers are willing to share the same masts -
(EG they don't in the UK, where there's 2 rival groupings,
& only one group's signal is receivable at RS's place).
Competing masts may be in different places, so you may observe
different reception signal strengths in the same place, from
different companies.
- Mobile phones can be set to either use a specific network,
or automatically use what seems `best'. When on automatic,
`Best' probably first means use same company as SIM card, even
if the signal is weaker (& thus `Best' might give a worse
data connection ?). On manual select, if the SIM card in phone
is not from the network you select, the company might not grant
service, or may charge more. The network operator you select in
town may not be so good for longer distance out of town (EG
Germany used to have better national coverage from Deutsche
Telecom, but better coverage or more atractive terms in major
cities from other suppliers.
- For a Nokia 6110: Use Menu 4= Settings, 4-4= Phone
Settings, 4-4-5= Network Selection. Automatic Lets the phone
decide. Manual does an immediate scan to see what radio
reception of network suppliers is possible, then you can select
any supplier detected.
GSM Signal Slot Timing
- Expect possibly 20 to 40 Kilometres from the nearest mast,
& not much more ! - Regardless which GSM phone model or
manufacturer you use. (Ask FC for correct number &
explanation).
- I think all modern world type phones are GSM (digital)
& a constraint is the width of time slot allowed by the GSM
standard while scanning for phones, for the signal to travel
from the mast to your phone, & back to mast, before it's
time to talk to move on & negotiate with next phone
customer. Maximum distance is limited by speed of radio
transmissions (which is roughly speed of light), that's high,
but not infinite. The slot time is very short, so you'r
limited.
- G.E. found on the Atlantic off Portugal, his phone could
`see' the base station (=signal from mast) at 50 KM from land,
but couldn't interact with it until 20 KM from land. (he was on
a small [4?] man boat, & may have also been limited by
signal strength, & perhaps deep between waves at times
perhaps ? so maybe on flat waterrange might be further ?
- Australia has a double time slot, [so you might get approx
twice that distance ?] F.C. says:
The timing advance is 5 bits or 32 values in units of one
quarter bit. 1 QB is 4.59183/5000 ms, and if you work it
out you will find max advance is about 30km. Australia
allows for 200 km cells, but this is transparent to the
mobile. The base station is special
- Presumably old fashioned analogue phones do not suffer this
constraint, but then they may be hard to obtain, & network
access may not be available too, & those phones will suffer
normal radio signal degradation dependent on distances, but
with shorter range than radio, as higher frequency. It's worth
asking knowledgeable locals who live/work in the sticks &
need mobile range. - Maybe that's why many are keen on CB,
powered by vehicle battery & antenna ?
Signal Strength - & Obstacles
- You can get an external vehicle aerial that plugs into some
phones, & leads out to an aerial on the car body. The Nokia
6110 has a rubber bung on the back, under the aerial, pull it
off & there's a socket for an external aerial.
- The signal strength is shown on the front left column of a
Nokia 6110 (but I think it's possible to turn it off, if it has
been, turn it on again :-)
- In cities part of the reason for so many masts is that the
buildings shield the signal. Mountains too.
- The signal doesnt bend round hills either, 2 month back
walking in Bavaria the signal completely died in one short deep
valley.
- A flat conductive surface EG calm lake, (even a
sea/estuary), between mobile phone & phone company mast,
generally helps radio transmission. (I guess flat snowfields in
EG Arctic/Antarctica would do too, wet salt plains might be
particularly good.
- Any signal strength versus distance measuring experiments
should be done on flat landscapes approaching or leaving small
isolated towns, with masts in the town but no further masts
outside.
- Probably you will see decreased signal strength on the LCD
display, long before you hear a difference, as GSM phones are
digital, & audio will probably only fail when the signal is
really bad,
- A metal vehicle EG car or caravan, is known as a Faraday
Cage to radio engineers, & reduces signal strength
considerably. You'll get better signal reception strength in
open air or 2nd best, in a canvas tent, not in a car or
caravan. BTW If you sit in car or caravan when using the phone,
as the signal received at the mast is lower, the mast signals
the phone to increase it's transmission signal strength. So you
get more more microwave energy into your brain than you would
if you got out of the car /caravan to use the phone.
- Draw a line from phone aerial to mast (centre of town I
guess) does it go through your head ? If so you'r making it
hard work for phone (& head !) most people hold phone
consistently one side of head (habit, or they prefer that side
microwave cooked most ;-) & if that is in middle of car,
rather than near a window facing a transmitter mast, that make
is more problematic. Presumably in Australia the window facing
the transmitter is the laminated (screening ?) windscreen on
the distant tail gate, tunneled by the length of the car.
LI>Get out of vehicle for a better signal. But move well
away from vehicle at fuel stops, it's even illegal to use a
mobile phone near a fuel pump in Germany, for fear of radio
transmitter inciting an explosion.
- A window wound down, if adjacent to phone & in line of
sight to transmitter may help ? I know glass zaps an 11 GHz
Astra satellite TV signal, (dirty glass especially I
recall).
- Is any person, head, hand etc, metal or (particulalrly
reinforced) concrete, stone, or laptop screen or other object
between the mobile phone & the mast in the town ? All
objects will reduce signal strength more than empty air. Try
holding phone verticaly, around just the lower part of the
phone, to avoid your hand screening the antenna/aerial which is
usually in the top half of phones). While looking at signal
strength on LCD screen, hold phone above head, & or clear
of other cars/obstructions. You can do this while not connected
& not paying money for calls, so it's easy to experiment,
looking at signal strength).
- When used with a laptop for data, is the phone mounted
vertically ? probably not, but it probably would help if it was
! It's probably laying down because it's got a cable stuck in
the base, & your hands are on the computer, but think about
it: As the phone companies' masts are vertical, the max. signal
strength will probably be when the phone is parallel IE also
vertical, as it would be when yoyu were standing or siting,
talking on the phone. Try to get it vertical. Perhaps use an
open mesh cotton/material thread bag that fruit sells in, &
suspend the mobile phone vertically in it, & hang it on a
nail or washing line/ string to a tree, allowing cable to hang
down through bag.
- In other (non Australian!) climates, I suspect heavy
rain/fog will reduce signal strength too (it kills analogue
Astra satellite TV).
Modem Speed
- Data links for Internet will probably fail before audio
becomes unusable.
- Higher modem speeds need good quality phone `lines'.
- Try to tell your computer to be less ambitious about
negotiating top speed data rate .
- Computers initialises `modems' with a Hayes compatible
configuration sequence beginning "AT".
- Although your Nokia has a `soft modem', it may still may be
possible to tell your software to be less ambitious, & to
try first for a slower data transfer rate.
Frequencies - Practical
- Dual band GSM mobile phones are 800 MHz & 900 MHz.
- USA uses 1800 MHz (=1.8 GHz) & may have longer range
?
Frequencies - Theory/ Speculative
The rest of this page won't help you, it's just background
notes on frequencies, until I can come up with a more useful
summary.
- (G.E.'s Nokia 8210 penetrates Arnulf Str cellar, but my
Nokian 6110 does not).
- European Astra Analogue Satellite works at 11 GHz
- British Telecom links to satellites used to work at 4 GHz
down, & 6 GHz up, (& avoided 5 GHz because rain
killed the signal)
- Speed of light = 3 * 10^8 metre/sec.
- l x f = C : Wavelength (metres) x Fequency (per sec) =
Speed (metres/sec): l = C / f : f = C / l
- Test/check case for VHF FM Radio (88-108 MHz):
W = 3 x 10^8 / ( 103 x 10^6 ) = 300/103 = 2.91 metre. So a
quarter wave antenna would be 2.91/4 = 0.73 metre. The max
telescopic aerial length on a table top VHF Aiwa, was 87 cm
from hinge screw to tip, (on an expensive Sony digital
receiver, capable of extra frequnecies: 118.5 cm, & on a
portable Philips, where aerial probably too short, to reduce
space & weight: 46cm)
- Reconsider 5GHz satellite dead band: Taking W = S / F: 3
x 10^8 / ( 5 x 10^9 ) = 0.3 / 5 = 0.06 metre = 6 cm
wavelength.
- Consider aerial on Nokia 6110: appears to be perhaps 2 or
4cm, assume that's a quarter wave stub aerial, which implies
wavelength of 8cm to 16cm, assume perhaps 10cm = 0.1m ?
implies f = 3 x 10^8 / 0.1 = 3 Giga Herz ! (Actually it's 0.8
& 0.9 GHz)
- Local radio is often on VHF for 2 reasons: It doesnt
travel far, & conflict with others, + more bandwidth for
stereo music. The only way nations such as UK get national EG
BBC2 on 90 MHz VHF FM is to scatter loads of relay stations
all round the country.
- Long distance national mono-aural news services use AM
(Amplitude Modulated) on lower frequencies EG 300 or 600
KHz.
- Really long distance world wide services use Long Wave
that bends round the earth on EG 150-300 KHz
- Lesson: The very high frequencies of mobile phones
restrict it's range severely EG at top of a mountain in
Austria a few tens of miles from Germany, I couldn't get my
German phone company, & had to use Max-Mobile, an
austrian phone co. -- well I was high but maybe there was a
mountain in the way :-) Wouldnt happen with AM radio though:
I get BBC world service radio either from UK direct, or from
north german transmitter, long way off, even if sometimes
reception is poor.
A major
contibution/ extension I've received (but not yet merged in)
from Jens G. Balchen
From: "Jens G. Balchen" <balchen_ERASE@saint-etienne.no>
Date: Mon, 07 Jun 2004 15:45:25 +1000
Hi.
I just wanted to make a short comment on mobile phone frequencies and
their effect on signal range. The higher the frequency, the shorter the
range. Traditional radio signals operate on a very low frequency, and can
theoretically reach the other side of the world if the atmospheric
conditions are favourable. On the other hand, low frequency signals don't
reflect as well from surfaces, so you need line of sight.
In the Nordic countries and Central Europe, a mobile system called NMT was
in popular use during the 80's. It was an analog system, and originally
operated at 450 MHz. When GSM was introduced at 900 MHz, a lot more base
stations were needed to cover the same geographical area.
Your Astra satelite signal at 11 MHz is disturbed by the glass window for
exactly this reason. High-frequency signals tend to bounce off surfaces,
especially hard ones such as concrete, steel and glass. Bluetooth radio
signals and IEEE 802.11 operate at 2.4 GHz, and cannot penetrate any hard
surface (also due to their weak signal, of course) -- however, because of
its tendency to reflect off surfaces, it can normally circumvent obstacles
(e.g. I can use my Bluetooth headset several meters down the office
corridor with my phone in the office, so long as the door is open).
This feature of high-frequency signals is the reason you need a lot of
base station inside cities with high-rise buildings. The buildings make
the signals bounce off the outskirts of the city and reflect back to the
mast (or contain your mobile phone's signal inside the city). Signals may
still get out, but they will have bounced from building to building, and
the quality will be terrible.
I once tried out wireless broadband from a provider located only 1 km
away. The two point-to-point antennas were facing each other, but line of
sight was interrupted by a building one story taller than mine and the
provider's. The strength of the signal was fairly poor (1 out of 3 LED
indicators on the receiver), but in foggy conditions the strength
increased dramatically. I contributed this to the increased reflection in
the atmosphere (from the tiny drops of water) -- the signal was able to
bounce over the obstacle and then down again without significant loss of
quality.
To conclude: GSM 1800 does not provide greater range than GSM 900, but it
provides greater reflection. Since most mobile users live in cities, this
is more beneficial than range.
2016-12-07:
https:// www . whistleout . com . au / MobilePhones / Guides /
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