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- 12-09-2006, 12:53 PM #1John E.Guest
T-Mobile, Nokia 6200.
From my home in San Jose, CA, USA, frequently when I want to make a call, I
get "No Service". If I sit and wait -- sometimes seconds, usually less than 1
minute -- I get 3 or more bars of signal strength and can make a call. This
happens regularly, many times a day. (This is not after powering on the
phone, but when the phone has been on for hours.)
Once a connection is made, the call is good; very infrequently is my call
dropped.
What's the technical reason for this experience? If it were as simple as a
truck on the street blocking my line-of-sight to the nearest cell tower, that
couldn't be frequent enough to cause my "No Service" experience. If it was
general road traffic, it shouldn't occur with such regularity and I shouldn't
be able to maintain a call without dropping, should I?
Puzzled. Ideas?
Thanks.
--
John English
› See More: "No Service"... then 3 bars?
- 12-09-2006, 01:52 PM #2John HendersonGuest
Re: "No Service"... then 3 bars?
John E. wrote:
> T-Mobile, Nokia 6200.
>
> From my home in San Jose, CA, USA, frequently when I want to
> make a call, I get "No Service". If I sit and wait --
> sometimes seconds, usually less than 1 minute -- I get 3 or
> more bars of signal strength and can make a call. This happens
> regularly, many times a day. (This is not after powering on
> the phone, but when the phone has been on for hours.)
>
> Once a connection is made, the call is good; very infrequently
> is my call dropped.
>
> What's the technical reason for this experience? If it were as
> simple as a truck on the street blocking my line-of-sight to
> the nearest cell tower, that couldn't be frequent enough to
> cause my "No Service" experience. If it was general road
> traffic, it shouldn't occur with such regularity and I
> shouldn't be able to maintain a call without dropping, should
> I?
Standard GSM is limited to 35 km (about 22 miles) range.
If you're in an area with few cells, this distance limitation
can cause the effect you're seeing. There'd need to be a
distant cell presenting a strong signal to your phone (probably
well elevated), with a closer, but usable, cell presenting a
weaker signal.
Then the phone is unable to interact successfully with the
distant cell. They'd be failing to negotiate a usable figure
for Timing Advance (TA in the range 0 to 63). The phone would
then find the weaker cell and register with that instead.
Assuming that the stronger cell is broadcasting the same
cellular Location Area Code (LAC) as the weaker one, your phone
is permitted to then camp on the stronger cell without any
interaction with it. And it would do so.
Any interaction with the distant cell would result in the
temporary "no service" outcome, as TA negotiation fails. There
are three scenarios which would trigger this: an incoming call
or SMS, an outgoing call or SMS, and an automatic periodic
location update (the timer value is set by the network).
If the above analysis is the correct one for your situation,
then your carrier could solve it for you by changing the LAC
for one of these cells, but you'd find your battery would
discharge much more rapidly because of frequent registration
attempts with the distant cell.
John
- 12-09-2006, 02:46 PM #3John E.Guest
Re: "No Service"... then 3 bars?
John Henderson sez:
> Standard GSM is limited to 35 km (about 22 miles) range.
>
> If you're in an area with few cells, this distance limitation
> can cause the effect you're seeing.
I'm near downtown San Jose. I presume there's more towers around here than in
the rest of the state! (c:
Seriously, this is a major metro area, and yes, I'm sure there's lots of them
all around. Within a mile on either side of me there's 2 major thoroughfares
and 2 major freeways. Lots of towers.
Does this change your idea of what might be my problem?
Thanks,
--
John English
- 12-09-2006, 05:04 PM #4John HendersonGuest
Re: "No Service"... then 3 bars?
John E. wrote:
> I'm near downtown San Jose. I presume there's more towers
> around here than in the rest of the state! (c:
>
> Seriously, this is a major metro area, and yes, I'm sure
> there's lots of them all around. Within a mile on either side
> of me there's 2 major thoroughfares and 2 major freeways. Lots
> of towers.
>
> Does this change your idea of what might be my problem?
Yes. I've seen the symptoms you describe only in a more rural
setting. The cells in question were broadcasting their
geographical names (as cell broadcast messages), so working out
what was going on was quite straightforward.
In your case then, I presume you're coming up against some
network configuration, propagation and/or firmware issues, but
I'd be just speculating about the exact nature.
John
- 12-10-2006, 05:39 PM #5matt weberGuest
Re: "No Service"... then 3 bars?
On Sat, 9 Dec 2006 12:46:55 -0800, John E. <[email protected]>
wrote:
>John Henderson sez:
>
>> Standard GSM is limited to 35 km (about 22 miles) range.
>>
>> If you're in an area with few cells, this distance limitation
>> can cause the effect you're seeing.
>
>I'm near downtown San Jose. I presume there's more towers around here than in
>the rest of the state! (c:
>
>Seriously, this is a major metro area, and yes, I'm sure there's lots of them
>all around. Within a mile on either side of me there's 2 major thoroughfares
>and 2 major freeways. Lots of towers.
>
>Does this change your idea of what might be my problem?
>
>Thanks,
The question is are the nearby tower the ones with transmitters from
your service provider on them?
- 12-11-2006, 12:14 AM #6MeGuest
Re: "No Service"... then 3 bars?
"matt weber" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Sat, 9 Dec 2006 12:46:55 -0800, John E. <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>>John Henderson sez:
>>
>>> Standard GSM is limited to 35 km (about 22 miles) range.
>>>
>>> If you're in an area with few cells, this distance limitation
>>> can cause the effect you're seeing.
>>
>>I'm near downtown San Jose. I presume there's more towers around here than
>>in
>>the rest of the state! (c:
>>
>>Seriously, this is a major metro area, and yes, I'm sure there's lots of
>>them
>>all around. Within a mile on either side of me there's 2 major
>>thoroughfares
>>and 2 major freeways. Lots of towers.
>>
>>Does this change your idea of what might be my problem?
>>
>>Thanks,
> The question is are the nearby tower the ones with transmitters from
> your service provider on them?
The nearest ones do not have to be his service provider's towers but it
should be obvious that downtown San Jose you would not exceed the maximum
timing advance limit (one generally cannot reach the max timing advance in
city environment radio propagation, Australian deserts with really high
towers or costal see areas are examples for that).
Do I understand right that the phone is "out of service" when you try to
make a call or is it showing service and only after a call attempt indicates
"no service".
Normally this could be caused by interference on the stronger cell, even if
the signal level is good, the quality is not sufficient for calls. Since you
say that you hardly get a disconnected call, once successful, even this does
not seem likely. I'm afraid this is difficult to figure out without any
insight info of the cells the phone gets connected (a phone with network
monitor capabilities would help). Sometimes the issue is odd propagation
from a far away cell, once the phone is camped on that, the neighbour cell
list does not direct the phone to the best local cell (those are not local
to this odd far-away cell. If your phone loses coverage temporarily, even
this sounds unlikely.
- 12-11-2006, 01:30 PM #7John E.Guest
Re: "No Service"... then 3 bars?
Thus spake Me:
> Do I understand right that the phone is "out of service" when you try to
> make a call or is it showing service and only after a call attempt indicates
> "no service".
Frequently when I go to make a call, I will first look at the display and it
will say "No Service". I sit and wait, staring at the display, and after less
than 1 minute -- typically -- it will give 3-or better bars of signal
strength.
> Normally this could be caused by interference on the stronger cell, even if
> the signal level is good, the quality is not sufficient for calls. Since you
> say that you hardly get a disconnected call, once successful, even this does
> not seem likely. I'm afraid this is difficult to figure out without any
> insight info of the cells the phone gets connected (a phone with network
> monitor capabilities would help). Sometimes the issue is odd propagation
> from a far away cell, once the phone is camped on that, the neighbour cell
> list does not direct the phone to the best local cell (those are not local
> to this odd far-away cell. If your phone loses coverage temporarily, even
> this sounds unlikely.
Bah! It is as complex a problem as I first presumed, before asking here. I'll
be getting a new phone soon, hopefully I can try it out first to see if it
handles the odd signal strength issues any better than my current phone.
What phones have "network monitor capabilities"?
Thanks,
--
John English
- 12-11-2006, 03:16 PM #8Guest
Re: "No Service"... then 3 bars?
On Mon, 11 Dec 2006 11:30:50 -0800, John E. <[email protected]> wrote this
with the utmost thought:
>Thus spake Me:
>
>> Do I understand right that the phone is "out of service" when you try to
>> make a call or is it showing service and only after a call attempt indicates
>> "no service".
>
>Frequently when I go to make a call, I will first look at the display and it
>will say "No Service". I sit and wait, staring at the display, and after less
>than 1 minute -- typically -- it will give 3-or better bars of signal
>strength.
>
>> Normally this could be caused by interference on the stronger cell, even if
>> the signal level is good, the quality is not sufficient for calls. Since you
>> say that you hardly get a disconnected call, once successful, even this does
>> not seem likely. I'm afraid this is difficult to figure out without any
>> insight info of the cells the phone gets connected (a phone with network
>> monitor capabilities would help). Sometimes the issue is odd propagation
>> from a far away cell, once the phone is camped on that, the neighbour cell
>> list does not direct the phone to the best local cell (those are not local
>> to this odd far-away cell. If your phone loses coverage temporarily, even
>> this sounds unlikely.
>
>Bah! It is as complex a problem as I first presumed, before asking here. I'll
>be getting a new phone soon, hopefully I can try it out first to see if it
>handles the odd signal strength issues any better than my current phone.
>
>What phones have "network monitor capabilities"?
>
This may be a totally different issue, but my Moto 'phone on UK T-mobile
uses 1800MHz and you presumably are on 1900MHz? Depending on where I am
inside my home I can get full signal bars or non at all. However, with
Vodafone and O2, other family 'phones, operating at 900MHz they get full
bars no matter where the 'phones are in the home. Towers for each provider
are all nearby so it's nothing to do with location. I was in an old
restaurant last Friday with a group from work and all of us who use T-mobile
or Orange (both 1800MHz) lost signal completely. Voda and O2 users were not
affected. Perhaps this is similar to your problem?
Does your problem happen inside and out or just inside your home?
- 12-12-2006, 12:49 AM #9MeGuest
Re: "No Service"... then 3 bars?
<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Mon, 11 Dec 2006 11:30:50 -0800, John E. <[email protected]> wrote
> this
> with the utmost thought:
>
>>Thus spake Me:
>>
>>> Do I understand right that the phone is "out of service" when you try to
>>> make a call or is it showing service and only after a call attempt
>>> indicates
>>> "no service".
>>
>>Frequently when I go to make a call, I will first look at the display and
>>it
>>will say "No Service". I sit and wait, staring at the display, and after
>>less
>>than 1 minute -- typically -- it will give 3-or better bars of signal
>>strength.
>>
>>> Normally this could be caused by interference on the stronger cell, even
>>> if
>>> the signal level is good, the quality is not sufficient for calls. Since
>>> you
>>> say that you hardly get a disconnected call, once successful, even this
>>> does
>>> not seem likely. I'm afraid this is difficult to figure out without any
>>> insight info of the cells the phone gets connected (a phone with network
>>> monitor capabilities would help). Sometimes the issue is odd propagation
>>> from a far away cell, once the phone is camped on that, the neighbour
>>> cell
>>> list does not direct the phone to the best local cell (those are not
>>> local
>>> to this odd far-away cell. If your phone loses coverage temporarily,
>>> even
>>> this sounds unlikely.
>>
>>Bah! It is as complex a problem as I first presumed, before asking here.
>>I'll
>>be getting a new phone soon, hopefully I can try it out first to see if it
>>handles the odd signal strength issues any better than my current phone.
>>
>>What phones have "network monitor capabilities"?
>>
>
> This may be a totally different issue, but my Moto 'phone on UK T-mobile
> uses 1800MHz and you presumably are on 1900MHz? Depending on where I am
> inside my home I can get full signal bars or non at all. However, with
> Vodafone and O2, other family 'phones, operating at 900MHz they get full
> bars no matter where the 'phones are in the home. Towers for each
> provider
> are all nearby so it's nothing to do with location. I was in an old
> restaurant last Friday with a group from work and all of us who use
> T-mobile
> or Orange (both 1800MHz) lost signal completely. Voda and O2 users were
> not
> affected. Perhaps this is similar to your problem?
>
> Does your problem happen inside and out or just inside your home?
>
This could be the issue. If you pick up your phone from the pocket, it could
easily have lost service while it obtains "several bars" when held up in the
hand. I'm not sure if OP observed the behaviour when the phone was e.g. on
the table, and no persons "shielding" it. The above "signal fading" could
happen on 900 too but normally (at least European) networks have so strong
coverage at 900 that it is difficult to find a fringe edge of a cell.
Anyway, at the edge of the coverage and inside, one may easily have a signal
strength change from "no bars" to "a few". The fact that OP had hardly any
dropped calls "could" be from the better phone position during the calls.
But the OP seemed to have analysed the case quite a lot and a simple answer
like this may not be sufficient.
- 12-12-2006, 04:26 PM #10Guest
Reboot?
I'm jumping in here 'cause you seem to actually know something about
these things work .
I'm using a Nokia 6820 in mid town Manhattan - which should be cell
heaven - and getting a slightly different behavior. If I'm in and out
of a no-signal zone (like the subway), the phone will not re-acquire a
signal. Yesterday I stood in the middle of Rockerfeller center looking
at zero bars for 20 minutes - well I was doing other things also....
A techie at Verizon advised me to reboot the phone when this happens -
turn it off, remove the battery and SIM, wait a few seconds then put it
back togeather and turn it on. This does work - BUT THERE'S GOTTA BE A
BETTER WAY!
Any ideas??
BC
- 12-12-2006, 04:54 PM #11Guest
Re: "No Service"... then 3 bars?
On Tue, 12 Dec 2006 06:49:27 GMT, "Me" <[email protected]> wrote this:
><[email protected]> wrote in message
>news:[email protected]...
>> On Mon, 11 Dec 2006 11:30:50 -0800, John E. <[email protected]> wrote
>> this
>> with the utmost thought:
>>
>>>Thus spake Me:
>>>
>>>> Do I understand right that the phone is "out of service" when you try to
>>>> make a call or is it showing service and only after a call attempt
>>>> indicates
>>>> "no service".
>>>
>>>Frequently when I go to make a call, I will first look at the display and
>>>it
>>>will say "No Service". I sit and wait, staring at the display, and after
>>>less
>>>than 1 minute -- typically -- it will give 3-or better bars of signal
>>>strength.
>>>
>>>> Normally this could be caused by interference on the stronger cell, even
>>>> if
>>>> the signal level is good, the quality is not sufficient for calls. Since
>>>> you
>>>> say that you hardly get a disconnected call, once successful, even this
>>>> does
>>>> not seem likely. I'm afraid this is difficult to figure out without any
>>>> insight info of the cells the phone gets connected (a phone with network
>>>> monitor capabilities would help). Sometimes the issue is odd propagation
>>>> from a far away cell, once the phone is camped on that, the neighbour
>>>> cell
>>>> list does not direct the phone to the best local cell (those are not
>>>> local
>>>> to this odd far-away cell. If your phone loses coverage temporarily,
>>>> even
>>>> this sounds unlikely.
>>>
>>>Bah! It is as complex a problem as I first presumed, before asking here.
>>>I'll
>>>be getting a new phone soon, hopefully I can try it out first to see if it
>>>handles the odd signal strength issues any better than my current phone.
>>>
>>>What phones have "network monitor capabilities"?
>>>
>>
>> This may be a totally different issue, but my Moto 'phone on UK T-mobile
>> uses 1800MHz and you presumably are on 1900MHz? Depending on where I am
>> inside my home I can get full signal bars or non at all. However, with
>> Vodafone and O2, other family 'phones, operating at 900MHz they get full
>> bars no matter where the 'phones are in the home. Towers for each
>> provider
>> are all nearby so it's nothing to do with location. I was in an old
>> restaurant last Friday with a group from work and all of us who use
>> T-mobile
>> or Orange (both 1800MHz) lost signal completely. Voda and O2 users were
>> not
>> affected. Perhaps this is similar to your problem?
>>
>> Does your problem happen inside and out or just inside your home?
>>
>This could be the issue. If you pick up your phone from the pocket, it could
>easily have lost service while it obtains "several bars" when held up in the
>hand. I'm not sure if OP observed the behaviour when the phone was e.g. on
>the table, and no persons "shielding" it. The above "signal fading" could
>happen on 900 too but normally (at least European) networks have so strong
>coverage at 900 that it is difficult to find a fringe edge of a cell.
>Anyway, at the edge of the coverage and inside, one may easily have a signal
>strength change from "no bars" to "a few". The fact that OP had hardly any
>dropped calls "could" be from the better phone position during the calls.
>But the OP seemed to have analysed the case quite a lot and a simple answer
>like this may not be sufficient.
Well sometimes the obvious and simple is overlooked, though as I replied to
incognito, we'll have to wait for his response.
As to UK signal fade at 900MHz, I have an interesting point. I visit a
friend in Wales and outside his front door we get good reception on Voda and
O2. If we walk approximately 30 feet north or south, one of us completely
loses signal.
I don't use TMo there as it's dead
- 12-12-2006, 09:19 PM #12Todd AllcockGuest
Re: Reboot?
At 12 Dec 2006 14:26:53 -0800 [email protected] wrote:
> If I'm in and out
> of a no-signal zone (like the subway), the phone will not re-acquire a
> signal.
> A techie at Verizon advised me to reboot the phone when this happens -
> turn it off, remove the battery and SIM, wait a few seconds then put it
> back togeather and turn it on. This does work - BUT THERE'S GOTTA BE A
> BETTER WAY!
Power it off and on with the power button?
That worked with my ancient Nokia 8290 which had the same problem.
--
Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com
- 12-13-2006, 02:23 AM #13John E.Guest
Re: "No Service"... then 3 bars?
Thus spake [email protected]:
> Does your problem happen inside and out or just inside your home?
Both.
My office is near the front of my house, with a door leading to the porch. My
desk, where the phone is always kept when at home, is near the glass-paned
door. When I get impatient with "no service" and want to place a call
immediately, I open the door and walk onto the porch. I've never experienced
this as being helpful (although I continue to do it...); only after several
seconds -- maybe minutes -- will service return. Inside or outside, it
doesn't seem to matter.
Thanks,
--
John English
- 12-13-2006, 02:33 AM #14John E.Guest
Re: "No Service"... then 3 bars?
[email protected] said:
> This could be the issue. If you pick up your phone from the pocket, it could
> easily have lost service while it obtains "several bars" when held up in the
> hand. I'm not sure if OP observed the behaviour when the phone was e.g. on
> the table, and no persons "shielding" it.
The phone is lying on a desk just inside the glass-paned front door to my
home office. If I want to make a call, I pick it up and hold it many
different ways, hoping for better signal. If I have "No service" displayed,
how I hold the phone seems to make no difference; service will return
regardless where I'm holding it.
> The above "signal fading" could
> happen on 900 too but normally (at least European) networks have so strong
> coverage at 900 that it is difficult to find a fringe edge of a cell. Anyway,
> at the edge of the coverage and inside, one may easily have a signal strength
> change from "no bars" to "a few". The fact that OP had hardly any dropped
> calls "could" be from the better phone position during the calls. But the OP
> seemed to have analysed the case quite a lot and a simple answer like this
> may not be sufficient.
As far as I can tell, orientation doesn't seem to make a difference. It *is*
possible that moving the phone does cause better reception, and that this
takes several seconds to register and for the display to update the signal
strength indicator. But I have no way to know this. As far as my experience
has shown me, there is not connection between phone orientation and signal
strength.
Thanks,
--
John English
- 12-13-2006, 02:33 AM #15John E.Guest
Re: Reboot?
[email protected]:
> I'm jumping in here 'cause you seem to actually know something about these
> things work .
Otherwise known as hijacking a thread.
If you aren't commenting on the original poster's question, don't dilute the
discussion -- go start your own topic. It's easy to do.
Regards,
--
John English
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