thebignewt
Well-known member
- May 11, 2010
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Why does that matter? Does it affect the phone's performance?In the N.Y./L.I. area I've never seen better than -75dbm.
Why does that matter? Does it affect the phone's performance?In the N.Y./L.I. area I've never seen better than -75dbm.
Why does that matter? Does it affect the phone's performance?
Why does that matter? Does it affect the phone's performance?
Since most (all) of us are seeing the same exact values, it leads me to believe that they're representing the actual bars... I've never seen a value other than these 6 generically quantized:
-120 (0 bars), -113 (1 bar), -100 (2 bars), -93 (3 bars), -83 (4 bars), -75 (5 bars or better).
If anyone has more insight on this, please chime in. All I know, I can't wait to get the next OTA, which I'm hoping will offer standard dBm values.
Is not every 3 dB difference a double (or half) change in power? A 3 dB decrease is 50% of the power.
-93 dBm should be substantially less than -87 dBm (6 dBm difference).
Why does that matter? Does it affect the phone's performance?
i dont think that is correct. i know that theory is true in relation to audible dB. doubling amplifier power will net a 3db increase in SPL and vice versa. i cant see how this would translate to radio signal strength. i could definitely be wrong but i dont know.
Since most (all) of us are seeing the same exact values, it leads me to believe that they're representing the actual bars... I've never seen a value other than these 6 generically quantized:
-120 (0 bars), -113 (1 bar), -100 (2 bars), -93 (3 bars), -83 (4 bars), -75 (5 bars or better).
If anyone has more insight on this, please chime in. All I know, I can't wait to get the next OTA, which I'm hoping will offer standard dBm values.
Is not every 3 dB difference a double (or half) change in power? A 3 dB decrease is 50% of the power.
-93 dBm should be substantially less than -87 dBm (6 dBm difference).
I logged RSSI data from a recent trip from Lynchburg, VA to the DC metro area. About 14,000 data points along the trip, and the CDMA RSSI does seem to fall into discrete values of -75, -83, -93, -100, -120.
This is disappointing since all my prior Motorola phones display RSSI in 1dB increments. Lumping them into "buckets" like this is hiding the real data.
The LTE and EVDO RSSI meters appear to have a different set of buckets - but again they look like buckets.
Can anyone confirm if this has changed with the leaked version of radio code (4.0.3 I think)??
I have both Nexii and on a GSM version, it perfectly displays signal levels in 1dBm increments. It only goes up to -51dBm, and any signal stronger than -51dBm doesn't show which is a very common on most GSM phones.
i dont think that is correct. i know that theory is true in relation to audible dB. doubling amplifier power will net a 3db increase in SPL and vice versa. i cant see how this would translate to radio signal strength. i could definitely be wrong but i dont know.