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Active Electronics Help Center

  • Cel Fi GO Troubleshooting
    Cel-Fi GO CelFi GO Troubleshooting Guide CelFi Go Error Codes and LED Legend
  • 4G LTE Signal Strength Reference Guide
    The following indicators are used to determine the quality of a 4G LTE signal. The charts indicate rough guidelines as to what constitutes a particular level of quality, ranging from excellent to unusable. To avoid performance issues none of these values should be in, or dip into the red. Optimal performance is achieved when all values are in the green. Diagnosing Signal Issues There are many reasons why signal performance can vary significantly, which is why it is important to accurately diagnose your signal issues so that the correct solution can be implemented. . As always, proper installation of the antenna and related equipment is of critical importance and can turn a poor service into an excellent one. RSRP - Reference Signal Received Power The power, expressed in decibel-milliwatts, of the reference signal received from the cell tower. The reference signal is not the same signal that carries your data, but is a special, extra signal, which is exclusively used for estimating the power of the data-carrying signals coming from the cell tower, which the modem and tower use to negotiate data rates. An antenna can help you recover some RSRP, resulting in faster speeds. As always, proper installation of the antenna and related equipment is of critical importance and can turn a poor service into an excellent one. RSRQ - Reference Signal Received Quality The quality, exrpessed in decibel-milliwatts, of the reference signal received from the cell tower. This is a ratio between the power of the reference signal and the rest of the signal in that current LTE band. A higher quality reference signal indicates to the UE and tower to use more sophisticated data encoding schemes, packing more data into each resource unit, because the risk of data corruption is reduced. An antenna may not help you with poor RSRQ issues, but a higher LTE category modem (e.g. Cat12) can be more resiliant under poor RSRQ conditions than lower category modems (e.g. Cat4). As always, proper installation of the antenna and related equipment is of critical importance and can turn a poor service into an excellent one. SNR - Signal to Noise Ratio This is the ratio of interfering noise to the actual signal you are using. The higher the ratio, the louder and clearer your signal can be "heard" over all the background noise, leading to better performance. While it is possible for our modems to transmit some data in a negative signal to noise ratio you will certainly not find it to be the best experience, which is why recommend keeping it above 0 dB, which represents the signal and noise levels being equal to one another. As always, proper installation of the antenna and related equipment is of critical importance and can turn a poor service into an excellent one. Received Signal Strength Indicator (RSSI) RSSI is an overall measurement of the 4G LTE signal calculated using the values of the RSRP, RSRQ and SINR. This value is not displayed as part of the 4G Signal Statistics sensor, but it is an easy calculation to make and give you a general understanding of how your overall 4G performance should be. The RSSI value is a negative number and the closer to zero the better your 4G experience should be, to work out the RSSI all you need to do is the following formula: RSSI = RSRP + RSPQ + SINR So for example, if we had a service with an RSRP of -82dBm, RSRQ of -21dB and an SINR of 30dB; the RSSI formula would be -82 + -18 + 30 which equals -70dBm for the RSSI. As you can see that makes the RSSI to sit in the good range on the table below, even though the RSRQ is poor the RSRP and SINR are good enough to make up for that. Below is a table showing the generalised levels for RSSI values.
  • Locating a Phone Tower
    RFNSA Homepage
  • Tasmanian Digital TV Transmitter Sites
    Digital TV Transmitter Sites
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