Surecall Fusion4home Cell Phone Signal Booster Up To 2000 Sq Ft, Boosts 5g/4g Lte, Omni Outdoor Ante
SureCall Fusion4Home Cell Phone Signal Booster up to 2000 sq ft, Boosts 5G/4G LTE, Omni Outdoor Antenna, Home & Office Multi-User All Carrier, Verizon AT&T Sprint T-Mobile, FCC Approved, USA Company
- PRODUCT FEATURES— The SureCall Fusion4Home cell phone signal amplifier boosts weak signal in 2-3 rooms, up to 2000 sq ft, inside any small home or office. This results in fewer dropped calls, improved battery life, higher audio quality, and faster data and streaming for AT&T, T-Mobile, Verizon, Sprint, Straight Talk, U.S. Cellular and many more. Fusion4Home boosts 5G/4G LTE voice, text and data signals for all North American cell carriers, including Verizon’s 5G Nationwide data signals
- COVERAGE AREA— The indoor coverage area that the Fusion4Home creates varies based on existing signal at the exterior antenna location: 1-2 bars outside ~ 500 sq ft inside, 3-4 bars ~ 1000 sq ft, 5 bars ~ 2000 sq ft. If there is weak signal where the exterior antenna is installed, we recommend a booster kit that includes components to capture and broadcast a stronger signal, like the Fusion4Home Max.
- BEST PERFORMANCE— Finding a location with consistent signal that the outdoor omni antenna can capture is important and will improve performance. Indoor coverage area is directly related to the existing signal strength available at the exterior antenna location. For best performance we recommend a minimum 30 feet of horizontal separation between the base station and exterior antenna. Without this separation performance will suffer and the coverage area will be reduced.
- EASY INSTALL— Simply set up the omni outdoor antenna, run the cable into your home, and place the cellular amplifier (base unit) where you want. Other boosters require you to run cables or drill holes to install the indoor antenna, but not the Fusion4Home - the indoor antenna is attached directly to the amplifier.
- BUILT TO LAST— Designed and tested in the USA with the high-quality components for longevity and connectivity where you need it most. Includes industry best 3-year warranty and lifetime US-based tech support. FCC approved signal boosters. SureCall is proudly American owned and operated– US company based in Silicon Valley California. SureCall is an Authorized Verizon 5G Signal Booster Vendor.
Stay connected in your home or office with SureCall’s Fusion4Home, the most powerful cell phone signal booster that provides strong, reliable connections for talk, text, and fast 4G LTE data throughout homes or small buildings in the most remote and challenging areas. The Fusion4Home features 2XP technology, which doubles the uplink transmission power (up to 26 dBm) to maintain your connection throughout the weakest cell signal environments. Assembled and tested in the USA with outstanding build quality, award-winning technologies, all-carrier compatibility, and world-class support, the Fusion4Home is the premier cell phone signal booster for the home or small building.
Brand : SureCall
Category : Cell Phones & Accessories,Accessories,Signal Boosters
Rating : 3.7
ListPrice : US $449.99
Price : US $250.34
Review Count : 1671
Best Sellers Rank : #36,093 in Cell Phones & Accessories (See Top 100 in Cell Phones & Accessories) #44 in Cell Phone Signal Boosters
Other display features : Wireless
Color : Fusion4Home Omni/Whip
Whats in the box : Fusion4home Omni/whip Kit
SalesRank : 36093
SureCall Fusion4Home Cell Phone Signal Booster up to 2000 sq ft, Boosts 5G/4G LTE, Omni Outdoor Antenna, Home & Office Multi-User All Carrier, Verizon AT&T Sprint T-Mobile, FCC Approved, USA Company
- We live off grid in a very remote location on the back side of a mountain on the edge of a canyon.We have no chance of getting internet from any provider out here (there\'s never even been electricity run up here not to mention phone or cable lines, and we are on the back side of the mountain from the nearest town). We once got a tech from the nearest local provider to come up here, and he literally got out of his truck laughing and saying \"not a chance!\"There is no signal in most places around here in the woods, etc, but we were getting signal from a tower (US Cellular via Google Fi) probably 30 miles away, which fortunately is on a mountain we can see off in the distance way down beyond the end of our canyon.We would get maybe 2-3 bars at some places on our property, but our house is not in line of sight to the mountain with the tower (trees and rock ledges), so no usable signal in the house.So I put the antenna about 30 feet up in tree next to our house and inside we now typically get 3-4 bars. Sometimes we still have difficulty getting usable signal, but it is hard to pinpoint exactly why (maybe weather, snow on trees, network traffic, etc). Nearly all the time, however, we do now have functional signal.It is completely usable if you stand near the indoor antenna, but does not work very well at all locations in the house. We tried the omni dome indoor antenna but it didn\'t make much of a difference, still need to stand near it.It\'s a minor miracle that we get any signal here at all, and this does give us usable internet and phone, we just have to be positioned in the right place for best signal.
- This device boosts the raw signal just fine. However, the phone LTE data then no longer works. And since the phones are all currently using voice-over-LTE, one then cannot place calls either.In my case the signal goes from approx. -105 dBm up to -70..90 dBm, and the LTE data then stop working immediately or is grossly degraded in speed. I had 50 ft of horizontal and 20 ft of vertical separation between the 2 antennas. I tried both omni and yagi antennas for the external one, and both omni and panel antennas for the internal one. There is an observable difference in how much the signal gets boosted with different antennas, but there is no fixing LTE data. I even tried a different booster device from another reputable brand! The LTE data was still breaking down once the signal was boosted. This was the case on my Samsung phone which is using Verizon LTE, and on wife’s Samsung phone using AT&T LTE.What a huge waste of time and effort!
- While there may be similar products out there with better performance characteristics (and I don\'t know of any), I doubt that there\'s anything that comes close to this unit\'s specs and reviews for the price. HOWEVER, before you buy this or any other signal booster, use the tools available to evaluate the signal at your proposed installation site. As has been pointed out by various reviewers here, If you have no signal, there is nothing any amplifying device can do to provide one. The app I used to look at signals in and around my home was one called \"Network Signal Info\" available free on the Google Play store site for Android based phones. For iPhones, you can dial *3001#12345#*, press \"Call\" and get a similar function. This information was provided with the Sure Call quick start instructions.To begin, the unit is extremely well built using quality materials. And the performance (when the two antennas are properly placed) is spectacular. In my case, I live in a rural setting and my two nearest cell towers are located about 6 and 11 miles from my home. I use a Samsung Galaxy S5 smart phone which works \"most of the time\" with no signal booster. That is, I can usually dial out and have the occasional dropped call. Weather can really cause problems with my service, however. I live in a house with a very open floor plan on the main floor and a metal roof. My carrier is Consumer Cellular which uses AT&T towers and the GSM technology. I selected the Omni/Whip version (no directional antennas) as I didn\'t want to limit my coverage to certain towers or phone locations inside my house.The first thing to know is that you want the outside antenna located in the best signal area (see the tools in the top paragraph) available while providing the best separation between the inside and outside antennas. This separation can be either physical (SureCall specifies a minimum of 25 ft and they supply 50 ft of antenna cable) or electrical. For example, if you have a metal roof and the outside antenna is located above it, with the non-directional vertical \"whip\" antenna on the base unit on the other side of the roof (indoors), I suspect you could get away with less than the recommended 25 ft separation. With no metal roof it would help a lot to place the inside antenna \"co-linear\" with the outside antenna, that is, along a common axis, for minimum cross coupling. The reason this is important is that the \"gain\" or degree of amplification of the unit is automatically throttled back when there is too much \"feedback\" between the two antennas, greatly impacting the level of performance.So here are some tips: First, try if possible to leave all the adjustment knobs in the fully clockwise location for best performance and \"tune\" the system for optimum performance through antenna placement. If you have all of the LED\'s for the various bands flashing yellow, the amplifier is operating within its design range, and you are probably getting some degree of benefit. This doesn\'t mean, however, you are getting the most out of the amplifier. The single most important thing to remember is that performance is cut back significantly in proportion to the amount of coupling between the two antennas. Directional antennas will greatly reduce this, assuming you don\'t have them pointing at each other, but the trade off is the restricted field of view for cell towers and a limitation in optimum operating positions for your cell phone. I strongly suspect that most of the reviewers that did not rate this product highly were not aware of these considerations.Finally, Here\'s what I ended up with after my installation: Without the amplifier in operation, my Galaxy S5 registers -105 dBm (about 1 bar) at the best location inside and on the main floor of the house. With the amplifier switched on, the signal at the phone ranges between -65 dBm (5 bars in the best location) and -90 dBm (two bars at the two worst locations) anywhere on the main floor. I know I could do better by tweaking antenna placement, but I\'m quite happy with these numbers, so why bother? For reference, the omni outdoor antenna is sitting on a TV mast 20 feet above the ground, shielded from the indoor antenna by a portion of the metal roof. The base unit with the omni directional antenna is in my basement, just below the level of the main floor, with its vertical antenna angled so as to reflect its transmitted and received signals (from the cell phone) off the inside surface of the metal roof. This is the kind of antenna placement and tweaking needed to get great results from the SureCall (or any other) cell phone signal booster. Be patient and meticulous in your tuning and you will probably be thrilled with the results, assuming you have some level of cell phone coverage now. I\'m so pleased I ordered another of these boosters for a friend in a fringe area similar to mine. This person is on Verizon (CDMA) and gets even better results inside my house with her phone than I get with my GSM phone, so I\'ve verified that the SureCall works well with the two predominate technologies used by US carriers in both 3G and 4G modes.And BTW, There was a shipping problem with the first unit and Amazon did a great job of resolving it. Thank you, Amazon!
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