Being very new, I'm not quite sure I fully understand CA and what is needed to take advantage of it. With that said, before I decide on what modem I choose, I'd like to try to figure out if I can take advantage of CA at my location. Here's a rough map of what I'm dealing with. The closest tower only has band 13, but farther out there are towers with bands 4,13, and 66. Initial test with just my cell phone on the house porch (pointing to closest tower) give me a -81 dbm signal strength, and that is through trees.
Here are the approx. distances to each tower from my house (starred)
1. 2160 ft
2. 3.5 ml
3. 4.3 ml
4. 5 ml
5. 5.5 ml
6. 7 ml
First question...Does CA
1. require 1 tower with 1 band
2. require one tower with multiple bands
3. require multiple towers on the same band
4. multiple towers with multiple bands
Given the above map is it worth purchasing a modem that can take advantage of CA?
Carrier aggregation possibilities
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Re: Carrier aggregation possibilities
1 works if both the modem and the tower support intra-band CA on the band available, otherwise it's 2.
Also, the only modems without any CA are dated AF and will also have no MIMO support... Go with the highest category you are willing to spend for.
Also, the only modems without any CA are dated AF and will also have no MIMO support... Go with the highest category you are willing to spend for.
Re: Carrier aggregation possibilities
Is there a way to tell if a tower support intraband CA, or is it just trial and error?Viper67857 wrote: Thu Aug 06, 2020 2:26 pm 1 works if both the modem and the tower support intra-band CA on the band available
Re: Carrier aggregation possibilities
Currently, CA is supported through one tower with multiple bands. I read technology is there for CA on multiple towers but not activated in general. There is no intraband CA for B13. You will get CA on tower 2, either via 4+13 or better yet 66+13 if modem supports band 66. It depends if your reception is good enough for tower 2 with better speeds and your modem will pick the closest tower 1 no matter what because it has a stronger signal. There are a very few modems that allow you to lock onto a different tower if desired for better speeds. Carriers do not want you to do this but Quectel comes to mind from what I have been reading with AT+QNWLOCK=?
The last time I tried to lock onto another tower. My modem (not Quectel) would not activate CA but it did lock onto the tower I wanted on a specific band. Someone with a Quectel (the ones I have are not in my possession anymore) could help you confirm whether CA still works or not but I would imagine it's still better even not if you could lock onto band 4/66 with OK reception because it has channel bandwidth of 20MHz most likely vs the 10MHz on band 13.
You could check the signals of cells near by with a phone depending on what kind of phone you have.
Android - use LTE Discovery and Network Cell Info Lite.
iOS - use Field Test Mode by dialing *3001#12345#* then call button.
The last time I tried to lock onto another tower. My modem (not Quectel) would not activate CA but it did lock onto the tower I wanted on a specific band. Someone with a Quectel (the ones I have are not in my possession anymore) could help you confirm whether CA still works or not but I would imagine it's still better even not if you could lock onto band 4/66 with OK reception because it has channel bandwidth of 20MHz most likely vs the 10MHz on band 13.
You could check the signals of cells near by with a phone depending on what kind of phone you have.
Android - use LTE Discovery and Network Cell Info Lite.
iOS - use Field Test Mode by dialing *3001#12345#* then call button.
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Re: Carrier aggregation possibilities
Also, the most fool-proof to lock onto a specific tower, with any modem, is a highly directional antenna... If that's the only signal it can see then that's what it gets... Parabolic grids are the best for this.
Re: Carrier aggregation possibilities
Didn't think about that but yeah that should theoretically work too if you aim at the right direction and the modem sees the tower far away with better signal it will pick that over the closest one.Viper67857 wrote: Thu Aug 06, 2020 6:26 pm Also, the most fool-proof to lock onto a specific tower, with any modem, is a highly directional antenna... If that's the only signal it can see then that's what it gets... Parabolic grids are the best for this.