Hey guys,
Has anyone else noticed the terrible wi-fi capacility of the xperia play? Most of the time I pretty much have to be in the same room as my router in order to have a decent internet-connectivity. As soon as theres one thin wooden wall between the router and my play i have virtually no connectivity.
The Samsung Galaxy S seemed to have similar problems, but when compared to the connectivity of any kind of Iphone the difference is monumental
Is the Iphone's hardware just soooo much better, or does it have to do with the device's programming? Would a different kernel fix things?
I'd be glad for any kind of input. Thanks in advance!
So I guess no one has any answers to this... Except for buying a stronger router or Wi-fi amplifier
Cymatrelic said:
So I guess no one has any answers to this... Except for buying a stronger router or Wi-fi amplifier
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Reception in general on the Xperia Play has been a touchy issue. If you compare the actual dBm to another device, they are fairly close, with the Play often being a bit on the worse side. That being said, no easy way to increase connection power.
If you look at the schematics, there are ports that you could plug an external antenna into, but it would require modding the case (drilling holes, mounting plugs/adapters, etc). I'm working on my own case-mod that will do all of this for One of the two Cell ports and the WiFi port, but this is a personal hardware hack and not something done in software.
As to kernel settings for things like power boost or whatever else, you may have to talk to the folks on the FreeXperia project, or maybe DoomLord or FraserTag, as they have a bit of experience with the kernel on this phone. I'm not sure there is a programmatic way of increasing the power and/or reception sensitivity on the phone without hardware hacks.
All else aside, just try not to cover the back of the phone and possibly point the back of the phone in the direction of the signal (your router, cell tower, etc). That solves 50% of cases.
Thanks for the Reply!
I figured it's some kind of hardware issue...
Anyway thanks for clearing things up and thanks for the tips. Guess ill just have to drill a few holes in my floors and walls to have enough Wifi all over in the house
Good luck with your hardware hack! Seems to be kinda risky
Reception for me has been a lot better after updating to 2.3.3
I noticed if I leave the screen locked for a while, the wifi shuts off.. I'm guessing sony ericsson made it like that on purpose to save battery. My reason for thinking that is because it never cuts out while in use.
Sent from my R800
When I was using the rogers smc stock modem/router my play would keep disconnecting in the living room. I bought a netgear wnr3500L and it hasn't disconnected since. I do realize that the reception is weaker then the iphone 4 though
Sent from my XPlay using XDA App.
Reception occasionally drops but not that much my x10i does much better never loses connection guess it's a hardware issue
You can fix this often by re positioning your wifi router. For who doesnt know look up for how wifi signals travel travel around your house. Before you drill holes in your floor. You can also stuff a laptop wifi antenta in your play. There was a software hack for increasing output from wifi tx=100 or something but that was in froyo and not sure. I guess you can google tx power hack android
Problem is likely your house or your router.
I have both the Galaxy S Captivate and the Xperia Play. No problems with wifi reception whatsoever here.
Cymatrelic said:
Thanks for the Reply!
I figured it's some kind of hardware issue...
Anyway thanks for clearing things up and thanks for the tips. Guess ill just have to drill a few holes in my floors and walls to have enough Wifi all over in the house
Good luck with your hardware hack! Seems to be kinda risky
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Nothing to extraordinary. A few tiny holes drilled in plastic, some little coax pigtail adapters running to a junction where there are other adapters in the back cover, plus leaders that run some flat metal tape/wire in specific lengths on the inside of the back cover to have an extra tiny bit of antenna. Not sure on how it will hold in regards to interference though of multiple antennas. If it causes poor results, I'll just be modding it to run to the external interfaces and then plug in a big antenna that sits in my window, or runs to my car or whatever. I may make a custom car-dock and desk-dock to go with it.
If/when I get around to finishing it, I'll post pictures.
Cymatrelic said:
Hey guys,
Has anyone else noticed the terrible wi-fi capacility of the xperia play? Most of the time I pretty much have to be in the same room as my router in order to have a decent internet-connectivity. As soon as theres one thin wooden wall between the router and my play i have virtually no connectivity.
The Samsung Galaxy S seemed to have similar problems, but when compared to the connectivity of any kind of Iphone the difference is monumental
Is the Iphone's hardware just soooo much better, or does it have to do with the device's programming? Would a different kernel fix things?
I'd be glad for any kind of input. Thanks in advance!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I've noticed this. It is the same way for the cellular service. It's ridiculous how low the bars are. However, the actual data transfered is extremely high. I've done some research and it seems that the bar count is low for high connection. And the bar is high for ridiculously high connection.
Related
So, we have probably all noticed that even compared to other phones the xperia line (and the Play in specific) seem to suffer from lower reception capability.
Putting them side by side, my Motorola Droid (A855, OG Droid 1) gets a better signal both in DB measurement and in bars. Same thing for WiFi signal. I'm guessing there is an issue with design of the antenna array in the device that causes for lower reception/broadcast quality.
I don't wish to shell out $300 for a cell repeater or $300 + monthly for a femtocell that will eat my internet bandwidth (which is pathetically limited). With that in mind, I went and started looking over the device, its teardowns, and its schematics. I was looking for something as a diversity jack for an external antenna. Now I noticed, next to the battery connector, there is a small semi-covered coax input. It appears that if you pulled off the rest of the sticker, or even if you just pushed a coax prong into there you could potentially be an antenna. However, it is not specifically labeled as such on the system board or the chassis, and the schematics were largely electrical diagrams and not system board schematics. Is there any answer for this? On pretty much every smartphone I have ever owned, there is an auxillary or "diversity" coax jack for adding an external antenna or doing signal injection.
Does anybody have any input on this? I would love to be able to boost my phone's reception quality, even if only in the car or at home (even if it means a custom modded case for ease of connect/disconnect).
Cant help you with your specific question but i can throw a tip.
- Switch your phone to GSM only. It will strengthen the signal. The downside is you are stuck with G/E data speeds (slower than H).
dsswoosh said:
Cant help you with your specific question but i can throw a tip.
- Switch your phone to GSM only. It will strengthen the signal. The downside is you are stuck with G/E data speeds (slower than H).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sadly, with the US-CDMA variant and its firmware, I believe that is not an option. I'm specifically using the R800x. However, the board layouts are essentially identical.
I don't see the problem if you arnt getting any dropped calls. Wrap your phone in tin foil lmao
Sent from my XPlay using XDA App.
Deoxlar said:
I don't see the problem if you arnt getting any dropped calls. Wrap your phone in tin foil lmao
Sent from my XPlay using XDA App.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well that is sort of the problem. I live in an area that its hills are filled with lead and other heavy minerals. Dead zones and limited signal zones are rampant, especially while driving. I _DO_ get dropped calls, and more importantly dropped data. Heck I even get dropped data from the router in the house through only one wall just a room away.
Basically if I can find out where exactly the aux/diversity port is for antennas, then I could design and fabricate a better back cover to either allow for external antennas, or to integrate better antennas into the cover (like the Thunderbolt sort of does).
Side note: Wrapping it in Tin/Aluminum Foil would make it worse, I believe (yes I have limited sense of humour).
you can easely remove the rubber in front of the coax port (atleast it definitly looks like a coax port). Would like to see a back case with better antenna in it (also being able to harbor an extra fat battery).
svenk919 said:
you can easely remove the rubber in front of the coax port (atleast it definitly looks like a coax port). Would like to see a back case with better antenna in it (also being able to harbor an extra fat battery).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The problem is that there are several coax ports. The one near the battery connector is the most obvious, but there are some more that are under the secondary cover or behind more stickers. Trying to find out which one is which or what they do is not easy. I have some basic electronics schematics, some teardown pics/video, and a really really sparse parts replacement guide, but not much else to go on.
Plug in an antenna and see if it improves?
svenk919 said:
Plug in an antenna and see if it improves?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
*laughs* I suppose that would be the easy/simple way to find out, wouldn't it?
I'll see if I can find a matching pigtail adapter and see if I can plug a big fat antenna into and see if the DBM improves for either Cell or WiFi. I wanted to see if anybody could confirm before I attempted to mod this thing.
I recently purcheased the TF300 shortly after it came out and have loved it so far. Though I have had a couple issues with it. One thing I noticed is that when I am in a room outside of my wireless router (around 20-25 ft away), and have the TF300 in my lap, the wireless connection will greatly drop of. It will go down from 75% to about 40%.
What I found was that if I hold the TF300 up with my hands gripping the bottom of the tablet, I will get good reception. However, when I put both my hands around the top of the back of the tablet, the wireless connection drops immediately. I means it's immediately noticable.
Does anybody else have this issue? Is this common with all tablets? It kindof feels like the "grip of death" that the Iphone 4's had.
as long as you dont hold it over the wifi receptor it will be fine
Thanks for the reply.
I guess the main issue isn't me holding my hands over the top of the back of the tablet (testing to see where specifically the issue was), it's when I have it laid down on any surface, like my lap, or on the sofa... seems that whenever there is an obstruction of the top of the tablet, the wireless connection greatly decreases.
Is this true for other tablets? I've never noticed this with my Samsung Galaxy SII using wireless
wtrimble said:
Thanks for the reply.
I guess the main issue isn't me holding my hands over the top of the back of the tablet (testing to see where specifically the issue was), it's when I have it laid down on any surface, like my lap, or on the sofa... seems that whenever there is an obstruction of the top of the tablet, the wireless connection greatly decreases.
Is this true for other tablets? I've never noticed this with my Samsung Galaxy SII using wireless
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I picked up the tf300 yesterday. i havent noticed this with this one yet, i used to with my ipad 1g. its a fault of any wireless device thats designed to be as low power as possible. Also, you could try changing channels so a less noisy band (that can also play a part)
It has to do with antenna orientation, you can spin it slowly and watch it change signal levels. for this reason i have my router antennas positioned one upright, and the other straight out. This works for me as the router will use the signal from whichever antenna has the clearest reception.
Micro Center Selling TF300 for $349.99 32G Blue
Most reviewers say it's plasticky, no ips+ screen and slower speed than the Prime. I think these negative remakrs is affecting the price. it's almost as cheap as a brand new TF101-B1.
http://www.microcenter.com/single_product_results.phtml?product_id=0388515
After changing channels on my wireless router and moving the antennas on it.. I have not had anymore issues with the WIFI. I think it works great. videos stream instantly.
wtrimble said:
After changing channels on my wireless router and moving the antennas on it.. I have not had anymore issues with the WIFI. I think it works great. videos stream instantly.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Same simple solution people with primes used. yet some people to blinded to use this simple solutions to issues. glad you got it figured out.
I am not the originator of this... it was Hogwarts, all credit goes to him. I am simply bringing this back to the forefront as I want to make the signal in my phon stronger and wanted to also bring this to everyones attention so that they have photos to go off of. All thanks go to HogWart.......thank you Hogwarts...
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=24791423&postcount=52
He got the first photo correct: that's the MAIN FPC ANTENNA that gathers CDMA/GSM signals to make calling/texting/3G browsing possible
He got the second photo wrong: that's the GPS ANTENNA, self-explanatory
He got the third photo partially correct: that's the BLUETOOTH/WLAN ANTENNA, and that's explanatory again..
SOURCE: R800i Full Disassembly.pdf
jgregoryj1 said:
I am not the originator of this... it was Hogwarts, all credit goes to him. I am simply bringing this back to the forefront as I want to make the signal in my phon stronger and wanted to also bring this to everyones attention so that they have photos to go off of. All thanks go to HogWart.......thank you Hogwarts...
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=24791423&postcount=52
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
now to make it stronger for better signal..
narflynn619 said:
He got the first photo correct: that's the MAIN FPC ANTENNA that gathers CDMA/GSM signals to make calling/texting/3G browsing possible
He got the second photo wrong: that's the GPS ANTENNA, self-explanatory
He got the third photo partially correct: that's the BLUETOOTH/WLAN ANTENNA, and that's explanatory again..
SOURCE: R800i Full Disassembly.pdf
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
HE stated that its possible to use tin foil to increase the strength of the wifi antenna,,, is this true? Even after I reflashed a FTF back to 233 I still occasionally have a hiccup. Would adding tin foil, even a small piece, to that antenna make any difference and or improvement? I am tempted to do it as I want to try to make the most of my wifi experience.... thoughts?
Those are my photos
216Monster said:
Those are my photos
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Click to collapse
Yes those are yours man..... thank you for that.... really really helps...
skimming through the thread, i didn't see any post of him making a tutorial of doing such.. in another thread maybe? IDK...
but i read in most articles on increasing GSM and WiFi signal, adding a tin foil actually increases reception, though I haven't tried it myself.. most articles i've read involve sticking wires through exposed parts of the antenna, which, i can't find in our play's antennas.. (some even talk about sticking wires on external antenna ports of phones, which is way too obsolete these days ) either way, if someone knows a hack, without doing extensive damage to the Play's electrical integrity, i'd be happy to try it and post results.. until then, i think i love my play too much to be doing hardware hacks at the moment.. after all, i'm getting good signals atm, but i'd still love a little boost..
narflynn619 said:
skimming through the thread, i didn't see any post of him making a tutorial of doing such.. in another thread maybe? IDK...
but i read in most articles on increasing GSM and WiFi signal, adding a tin foil actually increases reception, though I haven't tried it myself.. most articles i've read involve sticking wires through exposed parts of the antenna, which, i can't find in our play's antennas.. (some even talk about sticking wires on external antenna ports of phones, which is way too obsolete these days ) either way, if someone knows a hack, without doing extensive damage to the Play's electrical integrity, i'd be happy to try it and post results.. until then, i think i love my play too much to be doing hardware hacks at the moment.. after all, i'm getting good signals atm, but i'd still love a little boost..
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
HE stated in the link above that he would make another thread and or add to that thread photos of adding tin foil to his wifi antenna to increase the strength, I do remember reading someone else about it from him too I think, but never found the photos.... I think the reason for that I am guessing is because his phone broke.... come to think of it I think he has moved on after his phone broke.
If anyone should attempt to use tin foil in their PLAYs to hopefully increase the wifi strength can you please post your results here... I am considering doing that myself but probably wont have a chance to do it until this weekend or sometime this month.
So I broke down and took the back off my PLAY. Gently peeled back the wifi antenna sticker from picture #3. and as R800x users do not have a GSM card but the slot is there I wrapped through the GSM slot and underneath the wifi/bluetooth antenna from #3.
I ran some speedtest tests and was getting around 24-25mbps (wish it were that fast in real life) speeds. I have not attempted to see how far I can get..... true test will be when I am at work on Monday (its saturday now) as where my office is I only have about 2 bars of wifi..... It would be cool if the tin foil would boost the antenna's range a little.
Also, I also wrapped over the tin foil with ta precise cut of thick packaging tape, so no tin foil is exposed... complete covered. I will post my results of my signal strength at work on Monday. If its improved I will let you all know, if not or its the same I will also let you all know.
Here is to crossing my fingers for a better range of wifi.. distnace wise
Edit: I am able to get about 30-40 more feet further from my router then previously.
I have recently purchased a Note 3 (SM-N9005), currently running it rooted with the Polish NB3, unfortunately knox triggered, but never had a faulty phone before, so I hope that continues!
One thing that has been bugging me in an otherwise great phone, is the wifi signal, quite weak to say the least, my Sony Xperia Z is roughly 2 bars stronger in the same place, in fact, so is my Q10 and various mobiles I have collected over time (Xiaomi Mi2s, Pantech 840s), annoying to say the least, tried all the tweaks and settings mentioned here and elsewhere and while they may help some, for me the signal is still very poor.......
Was watching an excellent tear down video here:
When he mentioned making sure the little contacts for the antennas were sufficiently bent upwards to make a good contact, very interesting!
So I carefully popped off the back after taking out all the twelve little screws, and proceeded to gently bend upwards the two connectors for GPS and wifi, I also ever so slightly roughed the silver connector with a fine needle, all done in theory to aid signal.....
As for the results, well, with the same ROM, and no router reboot etc.... the wifi that used to hover at one signal pip, maybe two, now moves between two and three, it even went full bar briefly, which it had never done before from the spot I used! And there are a few more SSID's in the list too
I am now as you would expect, very happy, the wifi still isn't fantastic, but it's a damn sight better now!! :good:
Please don't try this and then blame me if you mess up your phone, I take no responsibility if you do, posted this just because I was quite surprised with the results!
No one the least interested, thought with all the threads about the poor wifi this find may have been of interest? Unless I'm late to the show and this is already been done and dusted
no one is interested because its a high risk low reward scenario.
Happy you had good results, but most people dont want to risk destroying their beloved note for a potential (minute) signal increase.
nakedtime said:
no one is interested because its a high risk low reward scenario.
Happy you had good results, but most people dont want to risk destroying their beloved note for a potential (minute) signal increase.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Wouldn't say minute, having SSID's that weren't there before and one to two bars better signal is the exact opposite of that!
As for how difficult it is, unscrewing 12 screws and lifting off the back cover is a piece of cake, in fact you don't even need to remove it, just lift one corner away, watch the first few mins of the video, it's petty simple....
My phone didn't have the warranty sticker over one of the screws either, and the phone was brand new and sealed from the provider, weird
I've never had issues with the signal on my Note 3.
The (admittedly many) times I do get a lousy signal, the fault lies with the provider, not my phone. (I know exactly where each tower is and what its range is. And I'm usually outside of it.)
As for WiFi, once I moved the Router out of the reinforced concrete cupboard, I always get a full signal...
to the OP , very useful thread dont be put off because theres been little responce, like the guy said few would dare to unscrew there beloved Note but still useful to know.
Yeah the 3G and 4G signal seems strong, just poor wifi when compared to multiple phones in the same spot, at least that was the case
I guess I trust my hands more than most, bad flashes are more of a concern for me than a few dozen screws lol
Thanks
I gave my phone for repairs once and the wifi reception has been below par since. Had tried what you have posted before but was not quite sure if I had the wifi pin right. Also I had only tinkered with the raised connector on the board and hadn't roughed up the connector on the back panel like you did.
Well your post gave me some courage and with the help of the video that you linked I tried it. Unfortunately, I broke the connector and that obviously made my problem much worse!
But then out of desperation I thought I would get some common copper wire to try and connect the board with the antenna and it actually worked Looks extremely ugly but my note 3 now connects to wifi routers even better than my note 1. I am attaching screenshots of the two phones with the wifi analyzer app. There is also a picture of the copper wire mesh that i put below the wifi antenna connector on the panel before I put it all back together.
Definitely do not recommend that anybody try what I did. It was an extremely foolish thing to do for someone as clumsy as me.
Thanks still OP. My Note 3 is in top form again thanks to you
I did that and it fixed my poor GPS signal and it worked really well. I'll do it again for wifi pin
I did that and it fixed my poor WIFI signal. Thanks man.
I had slight water damage to my old Note 3. Since then my GSM signal has been really poor. I replaced the USB flex cable, as the phone wasn't charging as well - replacing it obviously did the job, but GSM signal issue remained.
Cleaned the GSM connectors and lifted the pins - that didn't help. When using o2 SIM inside the building it connects to o2 network straight away (signal not very good btw). When using other (Virgin in this case) SIM it doesn't connect at all and displays "Emergency calls only" message.
I think it might be the MoBo fault now, isn't it?
O2 OK but no VM reads as no CSC or wrong CSC .
Phone firmware has no knowledge of VM settings .
First things first, the WiFi reception on these tablets is garbage. They placed the antenna on the lower left hand corner of the tablet, right where your hands or other obstructions would be.
Besides that, the antenna is very small.
I used a molex adhesive cellular/WiFi antenna and can achieve a 8-12dbm gain in areas that had 76dbm or less reception levels.
Its very easy to do and can be configured back to stock very easily for warranty issues or whatnot.
Edit: moderator, could you move this? I posted from mobile and it seems I posted to the wrong forum.
eightrac said:
First things first, the WiFi reception on these tablets is garbage. They placed the antenna on the lower left hand corner of the tablet, right where your hands or other obstructions would be.
Besides that, the antenna is very small.
I used a molex adhesive cellular/WiFi antenna and can achieve a 8-12dbm gain in areas that had 76dbm or less reception levels.
Its very easy to do and can be configured back to stock very easily for warranty issues or whatnot.
Edit: moderator, could you move this? I posted from mobile and it seems I posted to the wrong forum.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Can you show a video of how to do it before this thread get moved?
The "cellular data" tag would infer that it is a 3g/4g antenna rather than a 2.4Ghz/5Ghz antenna - does it work with both bands only I notice that Molex do offer specific Antennas aimed at both Wifi bands used by the Shield. Thanks.
lmulli said:
The "cellular data" tag would infer that it is a 3g/4g antenna rather than a 2.4Ghz/5Ghz antenna - does it work with both bands only I notice that Molex do offer specific Antennas aimed at both Wifi bands used by the Shield. Thanks.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The print on the antenna doesn't include all of the bands it covers.
https://www.digikey.com/product-detail/en/molex-llc/1461850100/WM12970-ND/6005384
How well does the back sit with this antenna installed? I'd be tempted to install two of them at right angles to each other.
eightrac said:
First things first, the WiFi reception on these tablets is garbage. They placed the antenna on the lower left hand corner of the tablet, right where your hands or other obstructions would be.
Besides that, the antenna is very small.
I used a molex adhesive cellular/WiFi antenna and can achieve a 8-12dbm gain in areas that had 76dbm or less reception levels.
Its very easy to do and can be configured back to stock very easily for warranty issues or whatnot.
Edit: moderator, could you move this? I posted from mobile and it seems I posted to the wrong forum.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Can you please point out which one is the best? https://eu.mouser.com/search/refine.aspx?Ntk=P_MarCom&Ntt=178376642
Tx,
Roger
neosenshi said:
How well does the back sit with this antenna installed? I'd be tempted to install two of them at right angles to each other.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
There's only one coax plug, so two antennae may be an issue. It does not add anything to the back, as there's just enough clearance under the back cover for it to fit.
TheKicKer69 said:
Can you please point out which one is the best? https://eu.mouser.com/search/refine.aspx?Ntk=P_MarCom&Ntt=178376642
Tx,
Roger
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Mine is the 100mm unit.
Does this really work? Surprised nobody thought of this before. This is my biggest beef with this device. 2 bars or worse. Can't even keep a You Tube stream from glitching out. Gonna try it!
SoulRFlair said:
Does this really work? Surprised nobody thought of this before. This is my biggest beef with this device. 2 bars or worse. Can't even keep a You Tube stream from glitching out. Gonna try it!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Works great for me. Gained -8dbm in an area that I could only get 92dbm before.
eightrac said:
First things first, the WiFi reception on these tablets is garbage.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So I did this last night. I installed the same antennae as you did. I ordered the 100mm - it was quite a bit longer than the one in your picture but I routed the lead next to the battery which was fine.
I do think it helped - perhaps not the miracle cure I was hoping for. I seem to not be experiencing the same frequency of freezes and glitches when gamestreaming - however I did still see a couple of instances of the low signal indicator with 2 bars when streaming. Streaming from You Tube is still nowhere near as smooth as my other devices, a shield portable, kindle tablets and my Iphone or Ipad - more buffering and pauses.
ultimately, I do recommend the mod as it is easy, cheap and I think an improvement over the stock antennae..
Thanks for posting your experiment!
SoulRFlair said:
So I did this last night. I installed the same antennae as you did. I ordered the 100mm - it was quite a bit longer than the one in your picture but I routed the lead next to the battery which was fine.
I do think it helped - perhaps not the miracle cure I was hoping for. I seem to not be experiencing the same frequency of freezes and glitches when gamestreaming - however I did still see a couple of instances of the low signal indicator with 2 bars when streaming. Streaming from You Tube is still nowhere near as smooth as my other devices, a shield portable, kindle tablets and my Iphone or Ipad - more buffering and pauses.
ultimately, I do recommend the mod as it is easy, cheap and I think an improvement over the stock antennae..
Thanks for posting your experiment!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
tx for sharing; my question is there a BETTER antenna then the one you guys just installed? even if it's a few bucks more. and just to make sure you got 146185-0100 right?the 100 mm
TheKicKer69 said:
tx for sharing; my question is there a BETTER antenna then the one you guys just installed? even if it's a few bucks more. and just to make sure you got 146185-0100 right?the 100 mm
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I think there are better options for this antenna. First off the one the user selected is a cellular/wifi antenna and you don't need any cellular signal frequencies since unless you have the LTE version shield. I am going to buy a 2.4ghz/5ghz wifi only antenna and see how that works, should work much better than the one used in this mod.
kyungi1 said:
I think there are better options for this antenna. First off the one the user selected is a cellular/wifi antenna and you don't need any cellular signal frequencies since unless you have the LTE version shield. I am going to buy a 2.4ghz/5ghz wifi only antenna and see how that works, should work much better than the one used in this mod.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Can u please share your findings once this is done? Appreciate it.
Tx,
Roger
Such an easy enhancement
Good Afternoon Everyone,
I was successful at completing this mod as well. Although I didn't have any real problems with my Wifi Reception, it seems a little bit better than what it was. Here's a picture of it installed!
Take care, :good:
-Elo
Eloquence said:
Good Afternoon Everyone,
I was successful at completing this mod as well. Although I didn't have any real problems with my Wifi Reception, it seems a little bit better than what it was. Here's a picture of it installed!
Take care, :good:
-Elo
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
so how much of an improvement did u get from the stock one? and how much did it cost? where can i buy it from?
tx,
Roger
TheKicKer69 said:
so how much of an improvement did u get from the stock one? and how much did it cost? where can i buy it from?
tx,
Roger
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hey, so I don't know exactly the db, but it works better from further away from the Router in my house. Maybe it's a placebo effect, but it feels like it's better. You can buy it from here -> Click Me. :good:
Thanks,
-Elo
Turn off the Wifi Scanning. I was having the same issue, my K1 wouldn't connect to ANY Wifi spots. I'd forget them, reconnect, restart, nothing. Turning off the Wifi Scanning feature, it instantly connected. Hope this helps others.