Forum Discussion

crasster's avatar
crasster
Explorer II
Jan 29, 2022

Best solutions for internet - REAL solutions please! :)

I'm having a lot of trouble traveling because I can't get a "decent" connection. I must have one for part time work.

Decent means 10mbps. That's it. :) Fast enough for a tiny vid conference or some upload.

I'm having a lot of problems.

I've tried Weboost and it seems spotty (yes it's for my service AT&T with the correct bands supported). It sort "meh". It somewhat helps.

I'd be willing to buy a crank pole antenna with a parabolic or anything... I just want to be able to travel more.

My thoughts
1) Parabolic with a crank pole antenna mounted to my RV. Simply zero in on a cell tower at a campground.

2) Perhaps have a 4G or 5G supporting router with external jacks for step #1 rather than a cell phone near Weboost connected to the antenna.

3) How is starlink?

4) How is any other satellite internet?

I'm sort of desperate here. If I can make this work almost anywhere, I'll be able to travel very often.

Detailed tips really appreciated.

25 Replies

  • We have traveled full time 5 years and DW has to do video conferencing 3-4 times a week. I’ve tried boosters and all the rest. We use primarily use hotspots not phones. Well , we do have phones with hotspots… but as a backup.
    Multiple services Both Verizon unlimited plan and T-Mobile hotspot with the ATT phones (2) with 40g hotspot ea available. I have mimo antenna for Verizon and a Wilson cell booster with a simple 12” antenna but we rarely need to use them. Especially the powered booster as it many times causes more problems than solves. One of the services always seems to work as is. But we aren’t in serious remote locations . We started out with just att and rapidly found att or Verizon alone weren’t enough. Redundancy is our key and has served us well.
  • Dutch_12078 wrote:
    As Jon said, a MIMO (Multiple In Multiple Out) antenna set is a good choice if your hotspot or router supports it. I use an aimable dual Yagi set that has equaled or out performed our previous $600 amplifier/repeater everywhere we've been with it at less than one-third the cost. My set is mounted just above our Winegard "batwing" TV antenna.



    Thank you!
    What type of router are you using?
  • We have a I-phone with AT&T on a hot spot, you still must have a phone connection.

    no problem s far..

    be certain your data package is large enough.

    $$$$$$
  • As Jon said, a MIMO (Multiple In Multiple Out) antenna set is a good choice if your hotspot or router supports it. I use an aimable dual Yagi set that has equaled or out performed our previous $600 amplifier/repeater everywhere we've been with it at less than one-third the cost. My set is mounted just above our Winegard "batwing" TV antenna.

  • While an amplifier will increase speeds when the available service is extremely weak, a stronger signal does not always result in faster speeds. A pair of outside, rooftop antennas in a MIMO connection (assuming your cell modem has that capability) will result in far faster data transfers under most conditions than an amplifier.

    You will need a cell router - very few cell phones have external antenna connections, particularly MIMO capable.

About RV Must Haves

Have a product you cannot live without? Share it with the community!8,801 PostsLatest Activity: Jan 03, 2024