Big Katuna wrote:
way2roll wrote:
Curly2001 wrote:
We are going to be on the coast of Oregon pretty soon this year and cell phone coverage is terrible there, at least for us on Verizon. Would a cell booster be of any benefit there for us?
Thanks,
Curly
The answer is maybe. A booster won't do anything if there is no signal to boost. When travelling and requiring a signal I think the best approach is duplicity. Have a VZ and an ATT account for example.
Get the open signal app. It can tell you what towers, carriers and strength are in a particular area.
I’m going to go out on a limb and guess you don’t have a Weboost.
Many many times I have had none to one bar, poor to no data rate.
Plug in the Weboost and get 5-20 MBS. Two carriers help. Sometime you are throttled due to tower traffic by company eg Verizon will be slow but ATT is fast.
The sat signal and dB apps don’t tell the complete story.
Speed test does.
The fact that Weboost's own website will tell you, you can't boost a signal if it doesn't exist is almost a moot point. You can't create what isn't there. Unless of course your weboost is magical and creates a signal.
Granted it will pick up and boost a weak signal, (that's it's sole purpose) perhaps weaker than a phone can detect, but it can't create a signal out of thin air.
Open signal app has a speed test among a lot of other directional and live coverage indicators.
Telling you this seems silly though, as you seem to already know everything.