External GPS Antenna for Thread - P3600 Accessories

Hi,
I have found the External GPS Antenna for Thread, this is a good idea for car navigator.
http://cgi.ebay.com.au/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=120100893232

Does Trinity have a GPS Socket?
Funny, I thought that socket was for the GSM aerial. Does anyone know whether that is in fact a combined GPS and GSM socket? I have a couple of aerials at home (PDA-n/HTC3300 and std mcx). I will see if either of those fits because I hadn't thought to try them. Of note is the fact that the HTC 3300 has two separate sockets, one for GSM one for GPS.

I think that the socket is a GSM connection. It is identical to the GSM socket on the Artemis (Dopod 800W) I have. The GPS aerial I have for the Artemis will not fit the Trinity socket.
Having said that, I have ordered one. Even if it doesn't help with the GPS, it may help with the GSM reception in some marginal areas I visit. I will report back when it arrives, which they claim will be about 10 days.

It's a standart GSM antenna. Check the picture out. It's connected to Hermes!!!!

It is a GSM connector on the back of the Trinity.
I bought the aerial. As I expected, it did nothing for the GPS strength, but it did slightly improve the Phone signal so it was probably worth it.

Related

external Antenna?

Is there a spot to connect a external antenna like on tytn at the back?
No there is not.
ardsar said:
No there is not.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Are you sure?
Its usually hidden somewhere in the battery compartment under a sticker or label or rubber plug. It might even be under the battery its self.
What is very strange i found it in one phone under a lable saying Void if removed...
Very odd considering the plug while not public common use. Is a perfectly viable antenna connection and often used in rigs, car phones and business.
But most phones have them.
Yes, this doesn't.
thnx for the info guys. hmmm this might change my descion to get it. unless it has better reception then i get with my Tytn i wont be able to get reception without it.
This is an issue for me too, as I just found this:
http://www.easydevices.co.uk/products.asp?partno=TCANTENNATPRO&model=
Says it's an external GPS antenna for the HTC Touch Pro...
Or would this work?
http://www.mobilefun.co.uk/product/10939.htm?referer=FR_PROD-PR-P-10939
The first thing is discontinued, obviously because they found out (probably by some angry buyers) that TP DOES NOT have a GPS plug.
The second is a full BT GPS device. Works with any BT enabled computer or PDA (inc. the TP).
GPS Antenna
I was also disappointed that there was no BT antenna available.
I was seaching some GPS antenna maker hoping to find some that could use existing MiniUSB port on TP but it seems the port is unable to support communication with GPS software.
So sad, this would have been a good enhancement to TP if there was MiniUSB GPS antenna maker.
Guys do you know what you are talking about?
I suppose not.
BT or USB are not "generic I do it all" technologies. They work based on specific protocols.
A GPS antenna is usually passive equipment - and even for active ones we mean that something amplifies the received signal.
THAT signal (and in fact the whole antenna), is "stupid". It is the part of the chipset to receive the ELECTRICAL data and make them into usable data.
I am not sure if I am getting through, my English are not the best, but the point is that you are looking in the wrong place for the wrong thing.
Now if you want a real USB or BT GPS that you will use instead of the internal ones, that's a whole different story. This works and actually does it by using the "COM" (serial) support that both USB and BT include.
To make the story more complete though, USB solutions will not work for devices that don't support "USB-host" (i.e. being the host part not the client part of the connection). Most WM don't have this (and yes Diamond and TP also don't). So you are left with BT.
To be honest if you are ready to pay for that premium (and you seem to be, by the links you give), what is your problem if what you connected is a full GPS that "replaces" the internal one or not?
I hope everything is more clear.
I presently use a TyTN II, and have an external aerial as the mount for the device is under a metal dash, so shields the signal...
I therefore need an external receiver for GPS.
Se here: http://freespace.virgin.net/shaw.clan/modifications.html and click on the TomTom hiolder link, although this is with the older QTEC 9100.
Make sense?
For driving with my Garmin in the car i used a Re-Radiating in my Xterra with excellent results.
This is basically the setup I have, although the internal antenna wasn't integrated into the power plug.
http://www.semsons.com/gpsreran.html
Mine is a bit more similar to this so you can control where you mount the internal antenna.
http://www.mapsdownunder.com.au/cgi-bin/mapshop/MG-GPSPHMANTRA45.html
I have yet to test it on the Fuze but will probably do it when I have time this weekend. The change in signal strength is drastic (on the garmin).
Woow insanely expensive!
Kerensky97 said:
....
I have yet to test it on the Fuze but will probably do it when I have time this weekend. The change in signal strength is drastic (on the garmin).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Please let us know if it works.

external antenna

Is there a small slide out antenna on the market that i could connect on the connector @ the back of the samsung galaxy s near the sim.
I want to boost up my signal strenght becouse me 3g doesnt work that good in the area.
Any idea's its no problem to customize my backcover
From my point of view its a GSM testing cable connector for the hardware support.
Unfortunately nothing to extend range or to improve signal and not used like some older mobile phones for an external antenna when pluged to a car mount.
Search for
GH39-00985A
CBF SIGNAL RF TEST CABLE
CBF SIGNAL-SCHU550 RF TEST CAB
You are certainly wrong. I had some problem with my antenna before and by inserting a thin copper wire in that plug, i could got signal. It is definitely an external antenna plug. You can see the connection between that plug and internal antenna plug on the mainboard.
stepsch said:
From my point of view its a GSM testing cable connector for the hardware support.
Unfortunately nothing to extend range or to improve signal and not used like some older mobile phones for an external antenna when pluged to a car mount.
Search for
GH39-00985A
CBF SIGNAL RF TEST CABLE
CBF SIGNAL-SCHU550 RF TEST CAB
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So just stick a piece of copper wire in it?
Do not try it!
It's DEFINITELY an external antenna conector. I've used it to get signal in the middle of nowhere.
That said, DON'T DO IT!
It's VERY easy to break the conection to the internal antenna. Your phone will have no signal afterwards, only with an external antenna. Some had no signal at all, even with an external.
It happened to me, as detailed in this thread.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?p=18594705

External Antenna Patch Cable

Hi Guys,
This is a reference thread for anybody who has patchy reception and is considering using an external antenna to boost reception.
I have found that the patch cable required is the same as most other samsung phones.
The particular cable I used is this one: http://www.cellink.com.au/productde...=1&pcr=WES0830&tsb=Samsung&tsm=Omnia+2+(i8000)
I imagine that the same type of product would exist overseas as well - but if you are in a tight squeeze Cellink distribute worldwide.
Note that plugging in this cable disables the internal antenna (so if you don't have an antenna plugged to the other side of the patch cable then you will lose reception immediately).
Finally note that YOU WILL HAVE TO REMOVE THE BATTERY COVER TO USE THE PATCH CABLE. I'm hoping to get a second cover and drill a hole in it so that I can simply plug the cable in through the whole. I can confirm that there is enough clearance to drill a hole and plug the cable in that way.
Let me know if you have any questions.
I quite like the idea, but I have a few concerns:
Does the antenna work for both internet (all networks), wifi, gps, and normal cell connectivity?
Would one theoretically be able to connect an RP-SMA antenna, I have some nice wifi antennas lying around
I have read some concerns about the manual switch responsible for turning the internal antenna on / off is not that reliable and can cause issues stopping your internal antennas from working
Hi fed44,
Answers in red below.
fed44 said:
I quite like the idea, but I have a few concerns:
Does the antenna work for both internet (all networks), wifi, gps, and normal cell connectivity? Yes, no, no and yes is the short answer. The external antenna is ONLY for the telephone radio.
Would one theoretically be able to connect an RP-SMA antenna, I have some nice wifi antennas lying around I'm not an expert here but from my limited knowledge: (1) you would need some kind of patch cable because the standard patch cable outputs to a male SMA connector (and not an RP-SMA) and, (2) there appear to be different antennas for different purposes (wifi, mobile network, etc.) my understanding is that a wifi antenna is not optimal for boosting mobile signal - that said it may or may not provide a boost over the internal antenna.
I have read some concerns about the manual switch responsible for turning the internal antenna on / off is not that reliable and can cause issues stopping your internal antennas from working I think this is an issue with older samsung phones. I have experienced no such issue with my external antenna (over around 10 uses). I'm not sure but I don't think it actually uses a manual switch - the reason why I say this is because when you unplug the antenna it takes a few seconds to switch back to the internal antenna.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I was thinking about using something like that. My problem is that 3G signal is very weak in two places where I spend most of the time - home and work. And for some reason phone is preffering 3G even if signal is so weak that internet is not working. So I had to turn off 3G. But it seems stupid to have HSDPA capable phone using EDGE only.
amaric said:
I was thinking about using something like that. My problem is that 3G signal is very weak in two places where I spend most of the time - home and work. And for some reason phone is preffering 3G even if signal is so weak that internet is not working. So I had to turn off 3G. But it seems stupid to have HSDPA capable phone using EDGE only.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I can confirm that this setup will be awesome for that.
I haven't drilled the hole yet (in the case that is) - but once I do that it will make the setup much more functional.

[Q] Samsung SCS-2U01 Verizon 3G Range Extender Upgrade

I have a SCS-2U01 which i got from Verizon because I moved and my service sucked. I Have goggled all over looking for an antenna upgrade for it, it uses a little tiny antenna and I imagine it would be greatly improved if I could find an antenna to raise the gain, I don't care about the consequences of increasing my signal such as more people being able to hop on my extender, everyone around here uses US Cellular and I don't care, I want better service.. All I see online are Better GPS antennas that will plug into it, That is not my problem my range extender gets a great GPS signal. I want to expand my CELL service the extender provides, it barely works on the other side of my house.
If no-one knows who sells an antenna upgrade for this device (possibly because it uses a strange connector, I haven't looked), can someone tell me which specific frequencies I need to nail to look for a compatible antenna then make my own connector for it. If it is a multi-Frequency issue I am willing to hack together multiple antennas just like an old TV house antenna, but since I'm only dealing with Verizon's EVDO Rev A and voice signal it should be Verizon's 800MHZ and 1900MHZ bandwidths they use. I'm asking for advice from anyone who has done this or knows about using two separate antennas then putting them together into one coaxial connector (of whatever type connector the extender uses). I know that one coaxial connection can support more than one frequency at a time, my asus router has 3 dual 2.4 and 5ghz antennas with only a coaxial connection per antenna.
To summarize my questions are, 1 is there a high(er) gain unpowered 800/1900 antennas out there (or decently cheap powered ones), 2 are those the only two frequencies I need for Verizon service below LTE (Verizon doesn't sell an LTE extender) or is there third frequency I need to be aware of and 3, does anyone know of an issue with SCS-2U01 that wouldn't allow me to do this. It appears the antenna is removable. Well, let me put it this way, I will remove it one way or another if I find higher gain antennas.
Thanks for any and all advice given, I will greatly appreciate it.
antenna
I know this is really late, but I just purchased the
5db Magnetic Mount Antenna with SMA Male connector 690~960 MHz, 1710~2170 MHz, 2500~2700 MHz for LTE, AWS, 4G, 3G, 2G, PCS, GSM etc
from this site:
http://www.maxmost.com/
I was thinking of the 11db Gain Magnetic Mount Antennas Tri-band (800/ 900 / 1800/ 1900 mhz) but the post from here:
http://www.wirelessforums.org/alt-cellular-verizon/verizons-network-extender-96712.html
says this antenna might cause an FCC violation. Plus this antenna is almost 3 feet long so I opted for the 5db antenna that is about 1 foot long. I figured that the frequency has to be around the 800mhz and 1900mhz band since that is what the specs of the scs-2u01 and others say in the specs site: http://www.verizonwireless.com/accessories/samsung-network-extender-scs-2u01/
I tried to use an antenna from an asus router, but that antenna was meant for 2.4ghz and 5ghz so it did not work properly. I will let you know how this antenna does. I was thinking of purchasing a couple of the business model scs-2u3100 and linking them, but this antenna might do the trick, and I already have a working scs-2u01. I tried for a while to get it to work with an asus RT-AC68U, but I could not do it even with all the tricks (DMZ, port forwarding, turning dmsmasq off, disabling SPI, toggling open access and managed access for the extender in verizonwireless.com, setting a static IP address for the extender, changing the static IP address of the extender, and all in 3 different firmwares (latest OEM firmware and latest beta, Merlin's AsusWRT, and DD-WRT )) I finally just replaced the Asus with the Netgear Nighthawk x6. This router is not worth the extra money for me other than the fact that it actually works with the network extender. I thought it might have just been broken for a while, but now I get signal in my house. Every call dropped before I got this working.
Was wondering how you guys made out with alternative antennas. Looking at an upgrade myself. Thanks.
Just in case there are others that are looking to do this I figured I would post my results as I went and purchased a The Wilson 311125 (formerly 301125), 50 Ohm 12-inch Magnet-Mount Antenna is a multi-band antenna that features up to 6.12 dB of gain, from Amazon and just hooked it up to my SCS-2U01. I went from my LG G3 reporting 1 bar of service in my living room to a consistent 3 bars and the notification bar reports 3G connectivity where it didn't prior.
That sounds good! What was the connection at the SCS-2U01, i.e. what type of rf connector was it? How difficult was it to detach the existing antenna and attach the 311125?
Only 7 years later lol, glad that worked out.. Anyone know about the same info but for the newer 4g or 5g extenders?
My original problem was solved by Wi-Fi Voice on a newer phone.

Htc white coax antenna ?

Hello,
Can you please tell me what is te purpose of the white coax cable conecting the charging module with main board.
I understand that is a antenna cable, i've broke the c connector by mistake and the phone is functioning ok, 3g, 4g wifi .
Thank you
possibly a second antenna is available
I don't think smartphones today have only one antenna, to use MIMO on different streams smartphones have multiple antennae
so you might have broken one, see and compare connection speeds
if you have 802.11AC router the maximum supported speed is 866Mbps
if rooted, you can use LTE discovery and see if you are able to use carrier aggregation

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