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- 01-30-2005, 02:41 AM #1Mij AdyawGuest
I had a Sanyo 4500 that would usually get three to five bars of signal
strength in my home and other locations. It is an excellent phone, however,
it lacked advanced voice dialing features and also had a very slow web
browser. I returned the phone and obtained the latest model Sanyo 7400. The
7400 has an excellent browser and advanced voice dialing, but displays a
lower number of bars in the same locations within my home. There is nothing
wrong with the 7400 because a friend of mine has the exact same 7400 phone
and it displays the same number of bars as my phone when it is in the same
locations within my home.
Why is there this variance regarding the number of signal strength bars that
are displayed from one Sanyo model to another Sanyo model? I could
understand that the bars may be calibrated differently between different
brands of phones, however I would expect the same number of bars to be
displayed on all of the Sanyo phone models.
Is this discrepancy simply a difference in the calibration of the signal bar
meter or does it indicate that the older model Sanyo 4500 has a much more
sensitive receiver and better RF performance than the newer Sanyo 7400
model?
What does everyone think?
Regards,
-mij
› See More: Number of Bars - WASSUP?
- 01-30-2005, 02:56 AM #2Guest
Re: Number of Bars - WASSUP?
Sanyo re-calibrated their signal meters at Sprint's request (starting
with the 7300/8200/4920 models) so that their brands would have more of
a standardized signal meter. It's nothing to be concerned about as the
older Sanyo models had over-inflated meters to begin with. As long as
you can make and receive calls fine the number of bars on the meter
doesn't matter.
- 01-30-2005, 10:54 AM #3Rob MerkleGuest
Re: Number of Bars - WASSUP?
OK a "bar" is not a standardized unit of measure.
It would be like if you got a new radio and you were pissed off becuase
the volume knob only went up to number 10 instead of number 12.
Mij Adyaw wrote:
> I had a Sanyo 4500 that would usually get three to five bars of signal
> strength in my home and other locations. It is an excellent phone, however,
> it lacked advanced voice dialing features and also had a very slow web
> browser. I returned the phone and obtained the latest model Sanyo 7400. The
> 7400 has an excellent browser and advanced voice dialing, but displays a
> lower number of bars in the same locations within my home. There is nothing
> wrong with the 7400 because a friend of mine has the exact same 7400 phone
> and it displays the same number of bars as my phone when it is in the same
> locations within my home.
>
> Why is there this variance regarding the number of signal strength bars that
> are displayed from one Sanyo model to another Sanyo model? I could
> understand that the bars may be calibrated differently between different
> brands of phones, however I would expect the same number of bars to be
> displayed on all of the Sanyo phone models.
>
> Is this discrepancy simply a difference in the calibration of the signal bar
> meter or does it indicate that the older model Sanyo 4500 has a much more
> sensitive receiver and better RF performance than the newer Sanyo 7400
> model?
>
> What does everyone think?
>
> Regards,
>
> -mij
>
>
- 01-30-2005, 12:07 PM #4Carl.Guest
Re: Number of Bars - WASSUP?
12? Damn, and I paid extra for 11.
"Rob Merkle" <[email protected]> wrote in message
newsk8Ld.47734$%[email protected]...
> OK a "bar" is not a standardized unit of measure.
>
> It would be like if you got a new radio and you were pissed off becuase
> the volume knob only went up to number 10 instead of number 12.
>
>
>
> Mij Adyaw wrote:
>> I had a Sanyo 4500 that would usually get three to five bars of signal
>> strength in my home and other locations. It is an excellent phone,
>> however, it lacked advanced voice dialing features and also had a very
>> slow web browser. I returned the phone and obtained the latest model
>> Sanyo 7400. The 7400 has an excellent browser and advanced voice dialing,
>> but displays a lower number of bars in the same locations within my home.
>> There is nothing wrong with the 7400 because a friend of mine has the
>> exact same 7400 phone and it displays the same number of bars as my phone
>> when it is in the same locations within my home.
>>
>> Why is there this variance regarding the number of signal strength bars
>> that are displayed from one Sanyo model to another Sanyo model? I could
>> understand that the bars may be calibrated differently between different
>> brands of phones, however I would expect the same number of bars to be
>> displayed on all of the Sanyo phone models.
>>
>> Is this discrepancy simply a difference in the calibration of the signal
>> bar meter or does it indicate that the older model Sanyo 4500 has a much
>> more sensitive receiver and better RF performance than the newer Sanyo
>> 7400 model?
>>
>> What does everyone think?
>>
>> Regards,
>>
>> -mij
>>
- 01-30-2005, 12:37 PM #5Sandy A. NicolaysenGuest
Re: Number of Bars - WASSUP?
On Sun, 30 Jan 2005 18:07:04 GMT, "Carl."
<[email protected]> wrote:
>12? Damn, and I paid extra for 11.
>
>"Rob Merkle" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>newsk8Ld.47734$%[email protected]...
>> OK a "bar" is not a standardized unit of measure.
>>
>> It would be like if you got a new radio and you were pissed off becuase
>> the volume knob only went up to number 10 instead of number 12.
>>
LOL! Reminds me of the movie "Spinal Tap" where the guitarist claims
his amp is "one louder" because the numbers on the volume knob go to
11 instead of 10.
Seriously though, I never trust the bars. I use the field test screen
from the hidden menu. Much more useful numbers there.
RX level displayed as a negative value from -105 (barely usable) to
-32 (standing directly under the cell tower).
Also remember signal to noise ratio. You may have a strong signal,
yet interference from other sources may keep you from getting decent
reception. On the LG phones (Ec/Io), this is also a negative number,
-31 to -15 (extremly high noise) to -14 to 0 (normal). The closer to
0 the better the ratio. Values from -6 to 0 are considered very good.
- Sandy
- 01-30-2005, 12:56 PM #6Mij AdyawGuest
Re: Number of Bars - WASSUP?
Sandy,
Thanks for the information. How do I get to the field test screen menu on my
Sanyo 7400?
regards,
-mij
"Sandy A. Nicolaysen" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Sun, 30 Jan 2005 18:07:04 GMT, "Carl."
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>>12? Damn, and I paid extra for 11.
>>
>>"Rob Merkle" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>>newsk8Ld.47734$%[email protected]...
>>> OK a "bar" is not a standardized unit of measure.
>>>
>>> It would be like if you got a new radio and you were pissed off becuase
>>> the volume knob only went up to number 10 instead of number 12.
>>>
> LOL! Reminds me of the movie "Spinal Tap" where the guitarist claims
> his amp is "one louder" because the numbers on the volume knob go to
> 11 instead of 10.
>
> Seriously though, I never trust the bars. I use the field test screen
> from the hidden menu. Much more useful numbers there.
>
> RX level displayed as a negative value from -105 (barely usable) to
> -32 (standing directly under the cell tower).
>
> Also remember signal to noise ratio. You may have a strong signal,
> yet interference from other sources may keep you from getting decent
> reception. On the LG phones (Ec/Io), this is also a negative number,
> -31 to -15 (extremly high noise) to -14 to 0 (normal). The closer to
> 0 the better the ratio. Values from -6 to 0 are considered very good.
>
> - Sandy
>
- 01-30-2005, 01:12 PM #7Peter PanGuest
Re: Number of Bars - WASSUP?
Hah! My radio goes to 35!
Rob Merkle wrote:
> OK a "bar" is not a standardized unit of measure.
>
> It would be like if you got a new radio and you were pissed off
> becuase the volume knob only went up to number 10 instead of number
> 12.
>
>
> Mij Adyaw wrote:
>> I had a Sanyo 4500 that would usually get three to five bars of
>> signal strength in my home and other locations. It is an excellent
>> phone, however, it lacked advanced voice dialing features and also
>> had a very slow web browser. I returned the phone and obtained the
>> latest model Sanyo 7400. The 7400 has an excellent browser and
>> advanced voice dialing, but displays a lower number of bars in the
>> same locations within my home. There is nothing wrong with the 7400
>> because a friend of mine has the exact same 7400 phone and it
>> displays the same number of bars as my phone when it is in the same
>> locations within my home. Why is there this variance regarding the number
>> of signal strength
>> bars that are displayed from one Sanyo model to another Sanyo model?
>> I could understand that the bars may be calibrated differently
>> between different brands of phones, however I would expect the same
>> number of bars to be displayed on all of the Sanyo phone models.
>>
>> Is this discrepancy simply a difference in the calibration of the
>> signal bar meter or does it indicate that the older model Sanyo 4500
>> has a much more sensitive receiver and better RF performance than
>> the newer Sanyo 7400 model?
>>
>> What does everyone think?
>>
>> Regards,
>>
>> -mij
- 01-30-2005, 03:11 PM #8Junior SamplesGuest
Re: Number of Bars - WASSUP?
When I first joined sprint, I had the mistaken belief that if I had one
or two bars, it meant that the phone was in contact with a tower and
that I could place and receive calls. I quickly learned that I need
three or four bars to place and receive calls. I also learned that in
most locations, I need to stand still because moving one or two feet
will cause the signal to drop. The only reason I have kept sprint as
long as I have is because I was able to obtain a very reasonable
monthly rate.
- 01-30-2005, 03:13 PM #9Guest
Re: Number of Bars - WASSUP?
It's very tough to get a signal reading as low as -32 dbs even when
standing right next to a tower. The lowest I've seen is -45 when under
a tower. This is due to the 1900 Mhz frequency and low power output of
most sites. I've heard Verizon users (800 Mhz) claiming to get -30
when under a tower.
- 01-30-2005, 05:48 PM #10Sandy A. NicolaysenGuest
Re: Number of Bars - WASSUP?
On Sun, 30 Jan 2005 10:56:49 -0800, "Mij Adyaw"
<[email protected]> wrote:
>Sandy,
>
>Thanks for the information. How do I get to the field test screen menu on my
>Sanyo 7400?
>
>regards,
>
>-mij
I've been suggesting someone create a FAQ about the hidden menus for
some time now. I don't know the key sequence for Sanyo phones.
For LG phones, it is "Menu", then "0", when prompted with "??????"
just enter all zeros. Proceed from there.
Howard Forums maybe? Sorry, I don't have any other info. (shrug)
- Sandy
- 01-30-2005, 05:51 PM #11Sandy A. NicolaysenGuest
Re: Number of Bars - WASSUP?
On 30 Jan 2005 13:13:46 -0800, [email protected] wrote:
>It's very tough to get a signal reading as low as -32 dbs even when
>standing right next to a tower. The lowest I've seen is -45 when under
>a tower. This is due to the 1900 Mhz frequency and low power output of
>most sites. I've heard Verizon users (800 Mhz) claiming to get -30
>when under a tower.
I'm just relating my own experiences. I don't know the actual range
of numbers, but that is what I've seen on my LG phone testing signal
strength. Maybe someone here has more information to contribute?
BTW, my LG phone is on Verizon.
- Sandy
- 01-30-2005, 08:07 PM #12Jerome ZelinskeGuest
Re: Number of Bars - WASSUP?
And I make calls with no bars only the antenna symbol.
- 01-30-2005, 08:21 PM #13Junior SamplesGuest
Re: Number of Bars - WASSUP?
I guess that's the difference between sprint service where you are and
sprint service in the Washington DC area.
- 01-30-2005, 08:35 PM #14Mij AdyawGuest
Re: Number of Bars - WASSUP?
Is the SprintPCS service bad just in one area of Washington DC, or is it bad
in all areas? Please be more specific.
Regards,
-mij
"Junior Samples" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I guess that's the difference between sprint service where you are and
> sprint service in the Washington DC area.
>
- 01-31-2005, 06:37 PM #15Junior SamplesGuest
Re: Number of Bars - WASSUP?
There are major problems throughout the Virginia suburbs. Also, in
many places in downtown DC, you have problems using the phone inside a
building. You have to step outside. (This applies to both sprint and
verizon. My boss has a verizon phone and he is always saying "Can you
hear me now?")
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