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I recently aquired a WeBoost Drive 4GM cell signal booster.  The 4GM isn't the latest and greatest offering, that would be the Drive 4GX.  I was initially drawn to the 4GX plus RV essentials kit which retails for $619.99.  The Drive 4GX by itself sells for $479 and the 4GM for $379.   I purchased the Drive 4GM from Amazon Warehouse Deals (technically used) for $273.  

Both the 4GM and 4GX are rated to boost cell signal by up to 50 db.  The difference being the 4GX is supposed to be twice as powerful and able to pull signals from further away.  The 4GX is newer and reviews seem to be somewhat up and down.  The 4GM has been around longer and has more consistent reviews.

The Drive 4GM comes with a stubby magnet mount outside antenna and a flat "Hershey Bar" inside antenna....

weboost Drive 4G-M, drive 4gm cell signal booster, 4g lte vehicle signal booster, verizon signal booster, verizon cell phone booster, verizon boosterImage result for wilson 301126 antenna

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After talking to a few tech reps from Wilson Electronics I decided to add the RV/Trucker antenna part #318433 and inside panel antenna part #311135

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The inside panel is much bigger than it looks in the pic. After trying to use it I discovered the phone still had to be extremely close.  Moving the phone away even a few inches decreased the signal boost. The supplied inside antenna seems to work just as well so that's what I went with.

 The outside RV/Trucker antenna doesn't seem to work any better than the included magnetic antenna.  In fact at this point I'm convinced the magnet mount antenna works better.  Specs indicate it has better gain on the band widths for 4G LTE and 3G LTE internet.  

When I first started this project I had big ideas about a hard install with wires permanently run and hidden.  Well, that didn't quite work out.  The biggest problem was getting the inside and outside antennas far enough apart.  If the two antennas are too close together it creates an oscillation condition and the booster quits working.  In the small confines of my truck camper the roof entrance point I wanted to use and placement of the inside antenna just didn't work out.  What I found that works well for my situation is to place the magnet mount antenna on a piece of metal attached to the roof rack and run the cable in thru a window.  The inside antenna can be moved to the other side of the camper providing enough space between the two for proper operation.  I found that actually placing the phone on top of the inside antenna works best.  It can be positioned that way and left laying on a counter or table for internet use.  To make a call I simply place the antenna and phone in my hand.  

We had a good opportunity to test this system out this week at Alabama Hills Ca.  On a previous visit we could tell it was a fringe area for cell signal as our phones would bounce between searching for service and leaving service area, never actually working.  On a smart phone you can select a screen that shows the signal strength which is measured in negative decibels.  -50 is pretty much considered a great signal and -100 pretty much no signal.  With the signal booster it took the signal from about -120 to -73, huge improvement making the phone(s) totally useable.  I made a test call to our daughter and she said it sounded great.  It also provided an internet connection, tho it was pretty slow.  The internet connection is where I really noticed the difference between the two outside antennas with the advantage ultimately going to the smaller included magnet mount antenna.

Here are the two outside antennas mounted to the roof of my camper.  The magnet mount antenna must be on a piece of metal at least 3.5" in diameter.  I took a cue from an internet video I watched and used an electrical junction box cover.  The Trucker/RV antenna provides it's own ground plane.  In the future I plan to make a mount that will elevate the magnet mount antenna a little higher.

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 Here are a few pics of the inside antenna in use.  Instructions say you can have the phone up to about 18" away but I found moving it away even a few inches decreased the signal boost.  One side of the antenna is Velcro.  One video I watched the guy put a piece of Velcro on the back of his phone and attached it.
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 Just FYI, pink phone cover re wife's phone......

My conclusion is that for us this was a good investment.  The ability to make an emergency call where it might not have been possible before to us is worth it.  Being able to have internet is a bonus.  That being said keep this in mind,  These are signal boosters, not signal creators.  If there is absolutely no signal available to boost, this thing won't do anything to help.  Also want to add, the booster will support up to 4 phones at once.  The boosters also support most all carriers.

If you choose to purchase a signal booster, know that FCC regs require you to register it before using it.  Not a difficult process, especially if you have Verizon.  Just fill out and submit an online form.....

                    Hope somebody finds this useful,  Erick

 

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Last edited by Big E
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Excellent review and photos. I have longed for one of these devices but just haven't "longed" hard enough to shell out that much cash. I looked at your warehouse deals link and there's nothing offered right now.

Question, you indicated that the external and internal antennas need to have a certain distance between them to prevent oscillation? Can you report what that distance might be?

Randy, the tech I spoke to said to get the 2 antennas 10' apart.  That doesn't seem reasonable since these are made to use in a car.  I found success at about 6 to 7'.  I'm sure it has a lot to do with the composition of the roof and such.   And yes, I am having the greatest success with the stock antennas that came with the unit.  I think they recommend the Trucker/RV antenna due to the fact most RV roofs aren't metal and it doesn't require a ground plane.  The ground plane issue is easily overcome to use the magnet mount antenna.....

 

And re the link I had included, somebody must have scooped on that deal.  To check periodically click the link(s) below.  Then where it says "Buying Choices" if there are any used ones available you will see "used" in blue.  Click that and it will show what is available along with a description.......

4GM link
 http://www.amazon.com/weBoost-...keywords=weboost+4gm

4GX link
http://www.amazon.com/weBoost-...keywords=weboost+4gx

Last edited by Big E

I have the old Speedboost by Wilson.  For portability, we mounted it to a little plank and carry it and the magnetic antenna in a little leather bag.  

Sometimes when traveling we put the bag in the truck to make calls while driving.  At night, we move it all to the camper.

Once we checked into a State Park in Arkansas and were told there was no phone service because we were in a valley on the lake.  We'd have to drive out of the park 1/4 mile to the top of a hill to use our phones.  

We moved the antenna all over, including all over the roof of the camper to no avail.   Then, by chance, I discovered a spot on the truck hood that gave us 1 or 2 bars.   We set a folding chair next to the truck to make calls and we called it 'the phone booth'.   They DO work if there's any chance of having some signal to boost.  Phone booster

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Last edited by Doug, aka Atchafalaya Man

I've been curious about a cell booster for a while, even considering making one myself with an old sat dish (directional) versus a non-directional like you did here. This further pushes me that route, but I don't think I'll be doing anything quite yet.

After dropping Sprint, my signal has already gone up But I would be curious if the residential version would actually be better for our application.

Leemom, if internet is something you require when you go FT, I would consider Hughesnet. It's not cheap, but they are making significant advances in satellite based internet and the associated speeds.  

 

TangoFox posted:

 

Leemom, if internet is something you require when you go FT, I would consider Hughesnet. It's not cheap, but they are making significant advances in satellite based internet and the associated speeds.  

 

Thanks for the info. We are still a few years away from this, but I do enjoy thinking about what I will be doing when I can get up and go. I will try to file this away somewhere for future use.

I just finish looking at all the pictures....nice use of the electrical box cover.....

The cabin that I parked my camper at, and also rented a few times in the PA ANF had one in there left by a frequent renter.... would not do anything for my phone...but the owner of the cabin says it works for the guy who leaves it there....

I may steal that idea (box cover) for a XM antenna mount....

Last edited by setters
Big E posted:

Doug, when you tried using the antenna on the roof was it placed on ferrous metal?

Yes, Erick.  I made from galvanized tin, a ground plane plate.   It holds the magnetic antenna.  It is about 14 inches in diameter and flat like a pizza pan.   It just sets whereever I want the antenna for the moment.

I have two ways of moving it about on the roof.  I open the escape hatch over the bed and set it somewhere I can reach, sometimes on the top of the air conditioner.   WIth no luck there, I climbed the ladder and tried it in back of the camper.  

Almost always, the escape hatch trick works as I've used it countless times in the past to call home when I was out on work assignments where I overnighted in my TC. 

In the case of the state park, nothing worked.  We were deep in valley walls, and in a curved cove on the lake..so we were blocked by terrain.    

I plugged the booster in the truck's power receptacle and started moving it about.  Picnic tables, etc...did nothing until I found that six inch spot on the hood.  

People walking by, seeing us sitting in our lawn chair talking on the phone, would get out their phones and start punching on them.....to no avail....and then walk on.  We'd LOL at them for they thought they had a hot spot.

My booster is old, but it saves the day many times.   Mine is not wireless.  It has a wire from the booster with a 'puck' that attaches to your phone temporarily with velcro.  It sticks to your phone near the phone's antenna.  You have to put a small, mating dot of velcro on your phone, or, as we do, just use a rubber band to hold it on the phone.

Last edited by Doug, aka Atchafalaya Man

We just returned from our favorite boondock site. We have NEVER had service there before and probably would have still thought service was non-existent until I received a text Sunday evening. There was one spot on the table next to the trailer that would occasionally show one bar of service. Move the phone one foot in any direction and the signal was lost. Also, trying to call out instantly caused the one bar to disappear.

This is the most sketchy service I've ever experienced and I thought about this thread and whether Erick's booster would have made much difference. I'll likely never know as we kind of like the idea of totally getting away but it was kind of fun trying to communicate from our "media outpost". The recipient of my texts said there were a few "multi-posts" of the same text.......probably a result of me responding to the "Resend, Try Again" screen that consistently popped up.

Randy, that indicates that there is a weak signal available and the signal booster would most likely make a difference.  So here's what you do.  Get a booster, go back there and call me after it's set up.  Just make sure your GPS location setting on your phone is enabled before you call..........

So far after getting the 4gX it has improved our signal by 20-40 dBm's.  This has made the difference between being able to make a call and/or getting data and not.

Today we will be in yellowstone and will try it and next week in glacier for an extended stay and will let you know how it performs there.

We will be getting the base/home unit for work when we get back from this trip as the many times at work you have to go outside, out from under the metal roof, to make a call to a customer.

Fizbin posted:

So far after getting the 4gX it has improved our signal by 20-40 dBm's.  This has made the difference between being able to make a call and/or getting data and not.

Today we will be in yellowstone and will try it and next week in glacier for an extended stay and will let you know how it performs there.

We will be getting the base/home unit for work when we get back from this trip as the many times at work you have to go outside, out from under the metal roof, to make a call to a customer.

Just remember, there has to be some available signal for it to work.......

Big E posted:

Randy, that indicates that there is a weak signal available and the signal booster would most likely make a difference.  So here's what you do.  Get a booster, go back there and call me after it's set up.  Just make sure your GPS location setting on your phone is enabled before you call..........

My older Wilson amp still works great and makes a real difference in being able to get phone service and Internet.

On our previous TC I had the antenna mounted pemanently on the roof attached to the roof rack. Tree branch snags would break off the tiny ground plain antenna stub outs. With the new Lance 1172 I decided to keep the antenna portable and and I built a antenna mast out of PVC, 24" threaded sections, that I can erect in a few minutes and mount to the roof access ladder. I mount the antenna to the PVC mast and I then run the antenna coax through the dinette slideout rubber wiper seal into the interior of the camper and connect it to the amplifier which is powered from the Lance factory USB/12volt cigarette receptical. Mucho better setup with no antenna breakage to deal with.  

I would never want to be without the amplifier and antenna when in the boonies,  cus it's always good to get a call out in emergencies, the Internet access is just a convenience. 

Nutman you raise a good issue. I actually have a small junction box on my roof for this purpose, I got two mending rods and screwed them in and then put a little silicone behind them to hold them away from the junction box, then I just slide the antenna into this gap which holds it securely in place. When I stop somewhere I open my sky light, stand up on the bed, and drop it into the holder. When I leave somewhere, I reverse the process - that way it's not sticking out way above my camper on my drives.

The cable from the antenna runs down into the skylight, which is a little annoying - I guess I could run it somewhere else, but it works for me.

Big E posted:

I recently aquired a WeBoost Drive 4GM cell signal booster.

                    Hope somebody finds this useful,  Erick

 

Looks like this will be very useful to us.

Just got back from a few days up by Big Basin, very spotty cell and internet service.

My truck has built in WIFI so that helps on that end, but inconvenient having to have the ignition in the Aux position (and the keys in the ignition). Good reception and broadcasts very well from the truck to inside of the trailer, AT&T based, but a bit inconvenient and doesn't really solve the phone issue.

I could add a separate phone service to the truck I suppose but would only use it infrequently, and then I would have to be in the truck.

I'm thinking what you have here is a good solution, wife is on Verizon, I use AT&T so there are two chances of getting a signal.

I bought one a few weeks back, there is a place in the State Forest about 15 minutes from my house that I have never been able to use my phone....I can now...

I only tested it at that spot and driving along in that State Forest road it seems to work really well for about 2 1/2 mile stretch of the road that I drove, I have not tried putting the inside phone antenna up against the phone, I just had it laying on the seat along side of me, so I can not give a report on that, I wanted to go up to the Allegheny National Forest to a spot I know, I only get one bar and can not make any calls from that location, it will be a good test also...but unfortunately I had got sick and didn't make the trip....

Last edited by setters

Tom, it's not total magic, but close to it and it.  Often it will save the day when you think you have no phone service.  And, it improves your mobile hot spot for the internet.

Last month with Setters in the Smokies, we had no phone signal.   The Speedboost worked in both our campers and we were also able to make a mobile hot spot with our phones because of it.  Without it, no dice. 

I had forgotten the metal ground plane for the magnetic mount antenna so we improvised by sticking the antenna to the bottom of a cast iron skillet and then put it on the roof.    

When Doug brought his over to my camper I instantly made my phone a hot spot and got on the internet....as a test we would turn it off(weboost) and I would instantly loose the internet connection...turn it back on and get back the internet... we tried that test a few times.... it sold me on one....!!!!

I'm now going to buy another two mini antennas and drop the wire from one down the Fridge vent and put a Velcro mount on the back of my dinette seat for the unit. The other one I will mount in my Jeep , and the one that came with I will mount on the truck...not necessarily in that order having three antennas will speed up the set up in all the vehicles......

I have been looking at these boosters, and was confused by the 10' distance requirement between antennas. I too wondered, how can this work in a car. It is nearly impossible to get 10' of separation in a truck camper. I had not seen this thread until today, and now I am thinking this will be my next mod project.

I have seen some RV'ers use a Wilson directional antenna, on a pole. More trouble to set up, but they report more gain than the vertical stubby. That would be the cat's meow, but I am not sure the directional antenna is type accepted with these units.

TangoFox posted:

I don't know if there's truth to this, but someone said the 120V adapter puts out 12v to the unit. Whereas the 12v adapter only puts out 6. They said that when at 120V, it gets a lot better reception than the 12v, because of that input power.

Anyone try that?

not yet....didn't have mine that long....!

I wouldn't try the input thing until you speak with the customer service department to confirm it, because I see now that some of the 120V inputs are 6v in... so I wouldn't want to smoke the device because of it.

Debating getting a different antenna other then the stubby one. Maybe I'll keep it for now and try it out first.

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