Cell phone reception

I used to be an active amateur radio operator and also worked as a radio technician with the NZ Post Office, back when it operated HF, VHF and UHF radio links. Although some conditions did allow long distance VHF comms, it is very rare for UHF comms to exceed the line of sight limitation, perhaps for a few minutes to a few hours every few years. The mechanism is mostly tropospheric scatter or sporadic meteor scatter. Ionospheric scatter was used for links by the US Army in the 50’s-60’s, but using VHF frequencies around 49 MHZ and powers up around 40 kW. The references indicate ranges of 1000-2300 km, so Vietnam to US is improbable in the extreme for UHF. Now, if you’re talking about HF then it’s a completely different thing, as it is common for intercontinental distances to be spanned by HF radio links.

For once, I do not object to a pun.

No, it’s “steer the stars”.

Thanks for the answers,Kenobi and Rain.

Hmm…a side effect of denser cell towers should be increased battery life. The towers will tell phones to transmit at a lower power, which takes less juice.

Interesting.

-D/a

But not much of an increase in battery life. The transmit power amplifier is the only thing that can be operated at lower power there is a lot of other stuff going on at basically the same power. So the overall phone power only decreases by a few percent.

Do they tell the phone to check in, or does the phone do that?

Modern cell phones will transmit at just enough power to get the message to the tower. The tower commands the phone to boost its power if the signal received by the tower starts to get too weak it will also command the phone to decrease power if the power received at the tower is too high.

Unless the Mercury gets poured into the cell phone case, it’s not going to have any influence.

Unless you’re actually on Mercury, its apparent motion to Earth will have zero effect.

OTOH, Mercury has terrible cell service to begin with.

It’s when Sprint is in the House of T-Mobile, and AT&T is aligned with Verizon that one should start to worry about poor coverage.