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801106 - In Building Wireless Cellular 60 DB Amplifier. For Cellular frequencies 824-894MHz (used by most cell providers except Sprint, T-Mobile, Cricket, Nextel, Southern Linc and Mike). Requires no physical attachment to cell phone. Requires internal Dome (301123) or Panel (301122), external antenna (301111) and cable (sold separately). | 
| Brand: Wilson Category: Wireless
Buy New: $599.95

New (2) from $599.95
Rating: 1 reviews
Media: Wireless Phone Accessory Shipping Weight (lbs): 2 Dimensions (in): 4.5 x 1.3 x 3.5
MPN: 801106 UPC: 813986004708 EAN: 0813986004708 ASIN: B000GW5AKM
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Features:
| • | Frequency 824-849 MHz uplink / 869-894 MHz downlink | | • | Allows Multiple Phones and Cellular Data Cards To Be Used Simultaneously | | • | Requires No Physical Connection To Your Phone or Cellular Data Card | | • | Works Great In Homes, Offices And Larger Buildings | | • | AC Power Supply Included |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Wilson Cellular In-building Amplifiers extend cellular services in poor coverage areas by amplifying both transmit and receive signals. The amplifier reduces problems with signal fades and dropped calls while improving voice quality, service range and access. Wilson Cellular amplifiers are network-compatible and enhance the cellular phone user's satisfaction without compromising the operation of the cellular system. Mobile cell phone repeaters are great for use in urban areas where you are experiencing dropped calls and poor connections. For usage in rural areas where signal is worse, a direct connect (inline) cell phone amplifier will perform much better.
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| Customer Reviews: Works, but needs TLC October 11, 2008 Robert Epps (Prather, CA USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I live in a rural area, and have a Verizon cell tower a few miles from me, but its signal is blocked by a hill behind my house. So I have one of these amplifiers set up on the hill, with a directional antenna at the top of the hill pointing at the tower, and an omni antenna behind my house to provide it with a good signal. For the most part it works well. However it seems to be very sensitive to various "overload" conditions, where a red light on the unit comes on and it shuts itself down, requiring it to be powered off and on to reset it. Getting too close to one of the antennas with a cell phone often triggers an overload; having the two antennas too close together (or an antenna too close to the cable that runs to the other antenna, so you have to route your cables carefully) also triggers an overload. So don't expect this thing to be "set it up and forget it" -- expect it to overload and shut down every few days or so, needing a reset. It would be really nice if Wilson could add some sort of auto-reset feature, where it resets itself and tries again every ten minutes or so.
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