external antenna - Galaxy S I9000 Accessories

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

Related

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.

Can I open the back up and connect an external antenna?

I've seen the tear down and I'm hoping someone has already tried connecting an external antenna to this phone and can share their result. I'm hoping to be able to attatch one mounted on my car and wire up a removable pigtail for use while driving through weak signal areas.
The connector visible under the battery should be the main antenna connector

[Q] Antenna connector

I am hoping to salvage my wonderful nexus 5. When replacing the screen I partial pulled the 3g antenna connector off of the main board. Now I randomly have service. Sometimes pushing on the back of the phone works to reestablish service, normally it does not. I was curious If I could get a custom antenna wire that would go from what i believe is the antenna test point to the normal connector on the bottom. If you think this would work any suggestions on where I could get that type of connector made

m2 gsm antenna problem

Hello good people of xda. While I was disconnecting the gsm antenna wire I damaged the ever so freaking delicate connector so I obtained a new one and fitted it but.. Still no data signal. I noticed on the motherboard that there are two connection points that connect with the rear cover.
One appears to be damaged. Do these contacts have anything to do with gsm antenna.
I wonder if there are any other points on the motherboard that I can connect the wire to?

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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