AFFORDABLE High Speed Internet Anywhere - My RURAL INTERNET Setup Revealed!!
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- Опубліковано 2 сер 2022
- 5000+ people requested that I share my rural internet solution that gives me 400 meg download and 40 meg+ upload speeds that I shared pictures of recently on my community post. I hope you find this helpful and please comment & share what you are doing for internet. Thank you
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Due to factors beyond the control of Silver Cymbal, I cannot guarantee against improper use or unauthorized modifications of this information. Silver Cymbal assumes no liability for property damage or injury incurred as a result of any of the information contained in this video. Use this information at your own risk. Silver Cymbal recommends safe practices when working on machines and or with tools seen or implied in this video. Due to factors beyond the control of Silver Cymbal, no information contained in this video shall create any expressed or implied warranty or guarantee of any particular result. Any injury, damage, or loss that may result from improper use of these tools, equipment, or from the information contained in this video is the sole responsibility of the user and not Silver Cymbal. - Навчання та стиль
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Just wanted to say, i appreciate this video. My 1 and only option for internet is centurylink, and i dare not say anymore.
I’m impressed 😂
I live in British Columbia and I had a Telus smart hub with a antenna and it got slower and slower as the years went on then we got starlink and it’s way better
Can you please post the URL for 1) Cellular Towers across the USA 2) The providers (website) for all of those antennas 3) a FOLLOW UP VIDEO. This video is spectacular with regard to how to get Internet those areas around the country where there is very little ISPs! Thank You 🙏!
Was the black thing sitting under the antenna the "innards" of the T-mobile unit? I have that box, and when I started a year ago only had 15-20 down, but in the last few weeks bumped it up and I am now getting 75-85 down. Would love to bump that to much higher numbers.
Instead of testing in a circle, a better way is to first test four cardinal directions. Note the two directions that give you the best speeds, then test between those. Keep cutting your sectors in half until you don't want to fine tune it anymore.
nope
I was thinking the same thing as well
Good thinking.
The only drawback is that you might find a "local" maximum in some direction, where a weaker or distant signal exists, and miss the "global" maximum.
See 10:48 and 11:00.
Are you a Transmission engineer?
@@osafosam8763 No, I specialize in satellite search grid autolock algorithms.
As an old hack pro RF technician, this is one of the best videos I've ever seen being done in layman's terms. Very well done sir!
This is a fantastic video with thorough explanation of what to try, what you will need and real expectations. I've been dealing with mobile hotspots with antenna hookups for a long time and learned the extremely fine tuning required for great service and you did a great job with instructions. Months of hard work paid off, well done!
Ok that's my favorite line out of all your videos. " you're probably breaking a warranty, but your not doing anything illegal" favorite line
You are an amazing wealth of information! Whether I need your solution or not, I listen because I feel like I’ve just been educated. I appreciate all your research and sharing of information!
I love when someone spends real time and energy to get a great result and then shares it with the world. This is awesome!
And then putting the sponsors at the END of the video, very nice touch lol.
Thank you! Keep up the good work!
So as someone who works in IT, you're assessment is spot on. I too live in a rural area but im only 2 miles from fiber, been that way for years, ATT has no interest in upgrading us so I was over paying for terrible DSL. Finally got my StarLink 6 months ago and I absolutely love it, as someone who is an online gamer and streams heavily it's been a godsend especially since I can tell ATT to bug off. I looked into cellular internet when I was waiting 18 months for my starlink but it wasn't an option where I lived so I am happy it worked for you.
I feel your pain i'm at most 2 miles from fiber. 😒
I'm less than a mile from fiber.... and the best service we have is 2mbps dsl lol. Been using nomad internet, no major complaints other than the price.
thats good to know, thank you! My mother has some land we are planning on developing but the only services listed are wifi and starlink and I stream and game and all that stuff a lot (plus work from home too) so I've been worried if satellite can handle it.
@@taylorknott400 whats the price
This is the first time I've seen someone in a similar situation as me. I have at&t and I only get 1.5 but im 5 minutes away from 10-20mbps. Thats not the best ik but its wayyyyyyyy better than 1.5. I use to have to go to the mall If I wanted to download anything. If I could get 10mbps I'd be happy with that.
This is great. Internet was the main thing keeping me from considering some rural properties. A real game changer for tens of thousands of people living with slow internet if they are good with tech also. I wish there was a simpler solution for some of my older family tho. Definitely some product opportunities here.
This was VERY helpful. I currently live in the Boston metro area and would like to move somewhere less expensive and more rural, but I have always been concerned about the possibility of crappy Internet service, especially if I continued to work remotely. This was a great tutorial explaining some of the options that might be available. For roughly $400 for the semi-directional antenna and another $50 per month for the router, what you have sounds like a very reasonable solution. Kudos!
Stay in the city. If a primary concern for leaving is "I might not get the consoooomer messaging" then you're exactly where you belong already.
@@colfrankslade it has not been my primary concern, I have a few other concerns that take more precedence
@@JeffreyMoon1974 I highly recommend Blount County, Tennessee. It’s rural, conservative, cost of living is lower than average, its right against the Smoky Mountain National park, and its also close to Knoxville and Chattanooga if you want some city night life. Also there’s no state income tax :)
Great video!
BTW, the analogy I use when explaning high gain antennas, is comparing a regular light bulb to a focused flashlight beam. It's easy to understand, that the flashlight focuses the given light. The same thing happens with high gain antennas. By using a narrow focused beam, the signal is concentrated, resulting in a stronger signal. (works on both transmit & receive).
Both are radiation just the light is visible I can't find a flaw in what you said
WOW! This was really a great post with tons of solid information. I have been following you for some time now and have benefited from your other UA-cam posts. Your lawn tips have worked to make our lawn much better than it has ever been. THANK YOU!
This was probably one of your most interesting videos. Thank you for taking the time to dig into this.
Starlink changed my family's life. Where we are does not have good cell and even with high end antennas it wasn't very good and we where never able to get a good consistent internet through cell. Ever since starlink it has been perfect we waited forever to get ours but it's fantastic, I can play competitive games and other family members can stream video with no issues. It truly is magical IF you can get your hands on it.
Same here. My brother & my best friend both got starlink after I had it for a year. All 3 of us love it. Absolutely life changing.
Using T-Mobile for over an year with good success and cost about the same than ATT DSL
Nice connection. I got the most bars aiming at one tower nearby but it wasn't the fastest speed. I'm getting about 330/70 which is extremely acceptable. My peak was 430/50 at one very specific weird spot but it was hard to keep it exactly in the correct position. Out at my off-grid spot I get about 30/2. Thanks for showing your external antennae so we can see it in action. I read about how to do it but haven't seen anyone actually hook one up yet on video. I appreciate it
I have been a T-Mobile customer for a while and then got added to the list of the new internet introduction and I can say it changed our world as I live out in a rural area and couldn't even work from home it was so bad. TMobile has been an awesome carrier for us for several years. Going to look at the antenna 📡.
Same story here we even get to game online brought us back into 2022
I have the same problem. I have viasat and their mbps are very low and I have been calling around because I want a work from home job and companies have rejected me because I haven’t been able to figure out the internet that will work in my area. Any information is greatly appreciated. Thanks
Reach out to T-Mobile and see if you are in the area where they can hook you up it is so easy with a simple Tower.
I lived in a community that only has verizon built in it is too expensive. I waited for TM mobile internet. Works fine saves me a lot of money
Excellent video Chris! I would love to move to a rural environment someday. I appreciate you talking about your results with this setup.
I have had starlink since it first became publicly available and it was uneven at first, but greatly improved since. Ping times are generally less than 100ms, and it even works thru a ⛈️.
I always thought about this as a possible solution for rural areas. You just confirmed my thoughts.
This is gold.
I am building a home out in the boondocks and I have been told there is no providers out there.
I am setting this up next week.
The biggest takeaway is that not everything we have been told for 30 years about Verizon and AT&T is accurate. We get beat into our heads that smaller brands can't be as good when in reality T-Mobile has been a solid performer for quite some time.
For the most part Verizon was the best carrier but this day and age all carriers piggy back off each other. T mobile really put an effort in their 5G speeds I’m pretty sure you could get a gig in most cities with a setup like this. On my phone I could get 300+mbps which is pretty impressive.
Verizon is still way better. Tmobile just happened to roll this out quicker than verizon. I have the verizon internet and it's works well. Tmobile is know to have the fastest internet for phones but is less reliable than a German car. That's why I switched to Verizon actually. My wife still has Tmobile and the amount of times I have data and she doesn't outnumbers the vice versa 5 to 1
@@andrewk8636 Which carrier is best is entirely determined by who has the most coverage and capacity in your area.
If you really want to look at the future, which one is going to be best will be whoever has the most spectrum available which is tmobile.
In the city if pittsburgh at&t is the best. T-Mobile sucks for calls.
Sooo T-Mobile is small in the USA? :o
I’m fortunate enough to have multi-gig symmetric fiber where I live so this video wasn’t for me, but it was still really interesting to hear what you went through.
Since you’re paying for two connections, have you considered bridging them? Might make for an interesting video!
T-Mobile bought a bunch of RF spectrum from the government auction. It was a huge investment, but it's paying off.
I’ve watched many videos on rural internet since moving to a mountain property two months ago. This is BY FAR the best one I’ve seen! Thank you for posting and very thorough!
Wow I really appreciate that!
TMHI is awesome, ive had it for quite a long time. Its always location dependent on where and how fast you get speeds also, your speeds depend on what band of 5G (or LTE) your TMHI box is connected to. I stand behind my TMHI, I got it while it was in the beta phase. Just really hope they upgrade my tower to the n41 band (currently on n71 (5G) and B66 (LTE)) so I can get faster speeds. Mine doesn't have any extra attenas on it, but I have no need to add any since mine gets 3 bars and the cell metrics are good, little noise, plus I have a tower I can see from my front yard. Great video, well put together.
Thanks for the information - got my 14-day trial today from t mobile and ordered the antenna. Tested tonight and got okay speeds without the external antenna. Can't wait until Saturday when it arrives. Keep up the awesome work!
How was it? I’m also thinking about trying the T-Mobile trial…
Thank you so much for this! My wife and I live in a spot in Oregon that has only one ISP. I've talked to everyone else and they all said they can't help me, including the really small guys. This helps because although I was told T-Mobile doesn't have service where I am for this home internet, that may not be strictly true. I have something to work with and that really gives me hope. Thanks again!
On most LTE routers, there is a way to look at the DB gain of the signal... So pull up that page, and use that to "see the signal strength" as you aim the antenna... Also, look for more than one tower, and some towers are disguised as trees, or are on top of buildings or other high points... Notice too that Starlink uses a motorized directional antenna to "point at the signal"...
The effect you are describing is called "beamwidth". How wide an area (in the horizontal domain) does your antenna cover? Usually the wider the beamwidth the lower the antenna gain (its ability to pull in a signal). That said, there are some antennas such as the flat one you bought that have both a wide beamwidth and high gain.
I was waiting for you to make a video about this! I am actually using a similar system, provided from a local ISP- but it’s not great. It does offer broadband-ish speed (50mbps down, 10mbps up, avg 20-70ms), however the reliability isn’t the best (3+ outages per month, sometimes more) but have been looking at T-Mobile for a while. Thank you for the video!
I have the same setup - T-Mobile and a Waveform antenna, if you have 2 cell phones with T-Mobile, put the plan on autopay the internet is only $30 a month which is incredible. My speeds vary 400 on a good day, 180 is more typical. The tower is 8 miles away line of sight on Oregon Peak in the Sierra foothills (I can see the red light flashing on it at night).
Thanks for this video. I’m currently working from home on the T-mobile 5G home internet, which I was told by T-Mobile is not available in my area. I used a family members address and brought it out to my rural home, and got decent speeds like you did. But working from home is not idea considering I am constantly making phone calls (internet soft phone) and zoom calls. My calls are almost always choppy and delayed. This sounds like the perfect solution to better my work days. Thanks!
Love watching your projects. In Washington state we too went the route of dropping DSL in favor of Cell providers. Unfortunately after a year of woes, aiming antennas, and trying multiple carriers and towers we could never hit more than 10mbps down and 3mbps up. I would say this likely due to heavier thicker terrain. In our case Starlink was the only viable method and we love it. I encourage all those who watch this to take the time and research their option like Silver Cymbal is promoting.
I'm in Western WA & Starlink went from "available in 2023" to "so your order may not be fulfilled until 2023 or later." I hope I'm able to find an alternative means to connect because DSL is awful.
@@kisha-maries9016 Already have Starlink, I too am in a "unsupported" area, but you can mitigate by paying an additional $30 for the RV package, same hardware but they will ship it. A low speed for us right now until coverage gets increased is 100mbps. Many times better than cell towers. We have PTZ cameras, Xbox, flatscreens, VOIP phones. We are finally modern.
@@connorh5930 Not all heros wear capes! Thank you, I'll look into it today.
I'm in that boat too but Starlink will never give me my dishy... They are backdoor dealing with hughsnet to not but in on their buisness I guess
Doesn’t tree cover affect starlink? I’m surrounded by tall trees very limited sky view so I haven’t given it a shot yet
Love this. I have tried cell phone boosters and am currently on the Starlink waitlist. I just may have to look in to this option. Nice video!
Definitely great info. Thanks for doing all the tests and posting your results.
Dropping serious knowledge! This was very educational and helpful, thank you.
Much appreciated thank you, I hope it is helpful
It's warming to see and hear of one Americans positive experiences with a mobile provider. Your new home looks so rural and yet you are getting better service than many city folk, even those on fibre. I really hope it continues for you. Yay, from Australia.
I really appreciate that. I have an upcoming video showing all my network stuff and how it connects together coming soon. Thanks for watching
T-Mobile generally is a pretty good ISP in most countries and has improved. Whereas I got like 5 Mbps over TMO in 2019 I now get close to 1 Gbps over 5G.
@@SilverCymbalyou know the t mobile Nokia router connects using 4glte and 5g right it’s connects to different 2 different signals that’s how you get the best signal Att and Verzion also have home internet but t mobile seems to be best so but also that router has a battery in also you can see what’s your best signal it’s at the top of the display
Very interesting. I have lived in my rural New England town for over 25 years. We are close to five major colleges. Over the last ten or twelve years I noticed houses just being abandoned. I am talking very nice homes. One day I was in the town hall and I ask someone in there what was up with this issue. She told me it was the lack of high speed internet. I had DSL and I was one of the lucky ones. Most had nothing or satellite which worked so so and was fairly expensive for the speeds your were getting. My town had been trying to get internet since I moved there and three years ago it happed. It’s been life changing and all of those abandoned homes have been sold and are looking great. Trying to sell a home without high speed internet is almost like trying to sell a house without electricity. That is why getting high speed internet is so important throughout the country. Thanks for making this video and putting in all the leg work. Many people do not realize how important internet is not only for the user but the seller of a home. I know no high speed is a deal breaker for me, especially now that I know what it can do to your town. Take care and thanks so much.
Yeah.
I totally needed this information!
THANK YOU
As more of us move to very rural area's this kind of stuff should rocket in terms of views. Please keep posting.
Yes! I haven't seen anyone endorse the T-Mobile home wi-fi yet and it is simply an AMAZING deal. No other company is offering anything close to it yet (as far as I've seen yet). Very cool to see an external antenna is possible, I may have to try this on a few family members who have the T-Mobile setup already. Thanks for the info!!
Verizon I'm paying $25 per month for lte internet. 5g is $50 but a solid connection on 4g can stream 4k
@@andrewk8636 Woah, cool! Do you have a hotspot/wifi router type device you can leave running 24/7?
@@elishmittywerminghanjensen1264 yeah the 4g lte box(built in wifi 6) Didn't pay anything up front for it, just $25 per month. Idk if new customers get the same perks or not tho. $25 and $50 is the price if your phones are on verizon as far as I know. Stop in a store and ask them tho. Also input your address and see if it's available where you live as it's dependent on emif they have enough bandwidth available in your area. I can't get 5g where I'm at but I can't afford it anyway and 4g is fast enough for me. Tmobile only offers 5g and its unavailable for me too. The home internet get better connection than my phone does and my signal isn't the best because of where my house is. If I drive 1 minute away the signal is perfect lol but regardless it's enough to stream and anything else I do. It is definitely not perfect tho, speeds dip down to 25mbps sometimes but once again my connection isn't perfect here, I haven't tested moving it around the house yet tho
@@andrewk8636 I appreciate the follow up, thank you!!
Cellular band is pretty high up there in frequency, UHF and beyond. Makes the signal pretty lossy over long cable distances, so don't be too tempted to go any longer than that 30ft cable that comes with the antenna. Go shorter if you can; have the router as close to the antennas as possible.
I have been tinkering with Starlink business for a few weeks now. Yes, the speed and quality of service varies widely.
I added a 25ft SMA low loss cable to the 30ft cable because it was not long enough to route into my home. I have not notice any loss. My ping is still 25 my Download is 480 and my upload is 60. I’m also only 2 miles away from an antenna and I have a clear view with no obstruction to the antenna.
The loss from air is significally MORE...
1000 feet cable would be less then 1ms loss(likely less then 1ms in a 10 mile cable)
Excellent video. I have a very similar learning curve in rural North Carolina. I ended up with the directional antenna. One addition you may consider to your video is a comment about using two directional in a V formation. It will increase the download speeds.
Glad you came out with this video. I’ve been going rounds getting internet to my camping property.
The only tower that I’ve verified, while still far away is Verizon. I’ve had issues getting trial sims to work on the Verizon network out there. To be continued.
T-Mobile and other carriers would be smart to implement something like this into a more consumer oriented product! They could sell an antenna that would plug directly into the router just like Starlink for a seamless experience. I’m shocked no one is doing it!
They've been around for years. Theyre called WISPs.
I live in Italy, and since we're a bit behind other big european countries on the FTTH, a lot of carriers offer the same thing that T&T has in this video, with or without Unlimited data. Oftentimes, they will offer two options : one with a plug and play modem / router you can put inside your house; another, with an external antenna/modem assembly and an internal router which will be then installed by a carrier technician
Leftist company’s are very bad at meeting the needs of their customers. In my world T-Mobile would have a local service tech to help people with setting up T-Mobile home internet which I found to be full of pitfalls. Then you get to spend a week with foreign service techs that not only did not understand the product but could not communicate as well.
@@KalebStorm What does WISP stand for?
@@kimf587 Wireless Internet Service Provider.
There are people who will a buy a fast cable/dsl/fiber internet service connection (like your home internet service) which they are allowed to resell. They then put-up wireless antennas and sell access to user to access the internet through there wireless infrastructure.
WISPs are also cellular networks that sell internet service like T-Mobile home internet etc
Chris and Cherie are awesome! Thanks for all your research from a fellow NH resident!
They really are, they do a lot of great work on this subject
Wow, this was an amazing DIY. I will be trying this soon! Thanks for all you do brother.
I have Starlink and love it. I've been using it for over a year. Glad you have a good solution.
This was very informative. Can't believe we still have data caps with cell/internet providers. Makes no sense. Starlink would be a good backup. Actually I am a firm believer of having landline/wireless/satellite mediums and in the future we will hopefully have protocols built that allow us to use all 3 at once.
There's nothing stopping you from using more than one ISP at once right now. You just need a router that is capable of multiple WAN connections. While you're not likely to find this on a plug-and-play consumer router, it can easily be done using something like pfSense or OPNsense. These can be installed on a router-oriented mini PC (I use one from Protectli) or a normal PC with a multi-port Ethernet card. Then they can be set up to use your multiple connections as fallback, load balanced, or with policy routing (picking a connection based on the traffic). Because of the way networking actually works, true link aggregation across multiple ISPs is possible, but requires more work than most people can justify (such as running an SD-WAN service through a cloud server).
in this video elevating the antenna is underrated yet the best improvement that was not mentioned here, just saying. and I am expert about this.
I have been paying for my T mobile router for 6 months and haven’t been able to get it to work at my lake home using a WeBoost cell tower. I have made several 3 hour trips to adjust to get better signal by adding omnidirectional antenna on top of roof and inside square antenna ( great 5 bars for Verizon and ATT but only 2 bars for T Mobil. This looks like a great solution that hooks directly to antenna port on router and thanks for sharing 😊
Best help info video you’ve done yet!
Great info, thanks for sharing such good smart refinement, current day technology.
Already have been using the Tmob 5G Wifi router $50/mo and it has 30-60Mb downs and 8-24Mb ups from inside a brick building. No doubt that implementing a directional antennae will drastically boost those numbers.
Can’t wait to try.
The reason the MIMO antenna works is it is flipping frequencies to maximize bandwidth, using two of the directional antennas in a right Angle with each other you get 2x2 MIMO with the proper router. I was mulling about setting that up with a cell booster.
Did you eventually utilize a cell booster as well? What make/model? Thank you!
Nice vid. Few things.. the beamwidth of your directional there is ok, so a slight change does not mean no Internet. Depending on yagi or log periodic. The router there looks like the huawei cpc2, which most service providers use, so you can check them online. Good antenna company is poynting, brilliant performance. Also have decent cable, because it can reduce your speed massively.
I am always learning something new from your videos. Keep up the great work.
Your videos are great man, and very eclectic. Keep up the sold work!
Where I live, when the power goes out, which is often, so does our cable internet even though we use a back up generator. Then cell data becomes congested to the point of being unusable. If the power is off long enough, more than a few hours.... the cell towers die. Starlink is free from those issues. As long as I can supply power from the generator, our home carries on like normal.
Wonder if you'd do a similar video on getting over the air TV? I really enjoyed this topic. Lately I've been thinking about putting in an outdoor antenna. I know there's a "man" UA-cam channel for that 😁, but he doesn't really show the installation process in his video (esp as well as you would). Maybe this is basic knowledge for some, but you always make such good how-to videos. Thank you for what you do.
Moved to a rural property in 2022 and i gotta say you saved me. I remember thinking it just didnt feel right to get charged hundred of dollars for 1.2 mbps per second or sometimes reaching kilobytes on weekends. Thanks for posting this video and sharing the tips.
I get 1.5 smh. Which isp did you choose to go with?
This is a very tricky topic, and you did a good job explaining the options. Great work, thanks.
I live in a rural area and i gotta say thank you my internet is so crappy imma haft to try this and see if it works!
Definitely try it, an antenna will always give you more speed, the only negative is buying it and putting it in, but you are guaranteed to get an improvement once you get the direction set
I have the Verizon Home 5G 300 down 20 up for $25 a month. It is consistent and we have a good line of sight to the cell tower in our rural community. I also have the local Fiber company. I use a load balancing switch/router that utilizes both and if one goes down the other is a fail safe.
They sold me verizon and don't work aty house, now m returning the white box
Exceptional video! My issue in my area using AT&T is congestion during peak use. Evenings and weekends are insanely busy and internet slows to a crawl.
Finally. An explanatory video. Keep them coming!!
That could be a lifesaver for me, I live in a Rural Area.
I hope it helps. Its night and day
You can also build an antenna. That looks like a four bay array with a plate reflector.
Also remember, height over local terrain counts so an omnidirectional antenna up 50’ with a good low loss coax “might” be a cheap option.
Thanks for sharing. This video would definitely benefit the users here in my local town.
I live in a big city and when I saw that T-Mobile had internet available at a lower price and higher speeds with no caps that that AT&T garbage I had been forced to use, I jumped on it. I'm much happier now.
What needs to be discussed is the actual installation including the coax length from the antenna to the T-mobile. The signal losses are high for these frequencies especially if
your mounting the antenna on the roof of your home with long coax runs. You could end up with the gain you might get with the antenna could be lost in the losses of the cable.
You can get larger diameter coax generally offering less loss but that could be problem getting it to where the T-Mobil unit is located. They do sell very expensive smaller diameter cable too. The best case would be the antenna can be
as close to the T-Mobile device as possible, for example the antenna looking through a window (the window will attenuate some signal) or the antenna mounted to the side of a house
with the T-Mobile device with 4-6 feet inside the house.
At least RG6, attention to things like bending radius, deformations of any type, high quality connectors (expensive), etc. Anything less means a Very Short run of cable. As noted, it takes very little to loose antenna gain...very little.
How do I hook up my T-Mobile gateway to the antenna on the roof? I don't see a coaxial cable input from the antenna to my gateway??
Dude..I'm in!! Show us how to wire the t-mobile stuff to the antenna..and please finish showing us how to do it!!
GREAT video (as usual). I'm moving to a rural area that's waitlisted for Starlink with no TMobile available, but the house is
Thanks for letting me learn something new today! Going to try that out if we need it when we buy our property.
I have both StarLink and T mobile on my farm. StarLink is consistently faster. T mobile is prone to slow down to very slow speeds when the leaves blossom for the summer and I only show two bars of signal strength. I’ve thought about trying an antenna for it and after watching this video will probably order one.
Thanks for your advice. I've been interested in T-Mobile's home internet service for the pass six months. My brother-in-law has it in New Orleans, but I live in a rural area that ONLY provides ADSL service between 0-5 mbps download and 0-.72 mbps upload. I posted a question on a local Facebook group asking about people's experiences with T-Mobile in my area. The responses came back very poorly, at best - spotty. But, you have revived my interest in your rural situation. However, being 75 on a fixed income, the cost of the antenna is prohibitive for me.
My question, has anyone made a semi-directional antenna from home materials: wire, electronics components that might work well enough?
Man Your solution with that T-Mobile direct antenna hookup is brilliant
Your knowledge of all these gadgets is amazing!
We were able to get the Verizon Home Internet in some parts of rural Tennessee. Oddly enough, it was only certain areas. Even if they already had lte service there.
I’m also in Tennessee sadly Verizon didn’t offer this 😭 I don’t feel like I live in a super rural area either
T Mobile is advertised as Unlimited but you’re actually deprioritize at 100 GB, I’ve been fighting with them for the past 3 months. I’ve been a customer for over a year. The service is not bad but if you’re in a somewhat populated area just believe you will be deprioritize after 100GB… just saying don’t plan on doing any live streaming anytime soon…
As far as cell phones are concerned they have what is called carrier aggregation, meaning they have the ability to combine different frequencies giving you a better output than your antenna will if your modem does not have carrier aggregation. Hope that makes sense.
I would never use that much data in one month more like 10 GB. And I watch a lot of UA-cam videos. 73
Very helpful and love your enthusiasm as always.
There are sometimes independent fixed-wireless providers in rural areas as well. With the new CBRS hardware available from Cambium and others, even if T-Mobile fixed wireless isn't available in your area, there may be other options to get the same quality of service or better.
very in depth, good video
Much appreciated thank you
Keep in mind tho when T-Mobile runs your address if they tell you it’s not available, it technically is there but they don’t allow you to get it in that area specifically cus of bandwidth limitations. So if you put it in an area where it says it’s not available when they run a imei and sim update check it’ll check location and could shut off if not at the proper address when you set it up.
Thanks for sharing your setup, your videos are always very informative! Keep them coming bud!
Much appreciated, thank you
Excellent video. After almost waiting a year for home internet service from T-Mobile, they finally emailed me service was available in my area. I signed up and am waiting for my router in a few days so once I receive it, I will check out the signal for strength. If unsuitable, I will try an antenna as you suggested. Thanks so much!
Great video, is performance impacted by bad weather? (rain, etc.)
With a good router (pfsense) you can load balance / failover multiple wans
Super helpful explanation of the sea of product, gimmicks, technology and plethora of options. Thank you!
Great information and excellent candid presentation. We've been stuck with At&t's copper line at 5.5 meg down. But it's enough to stream UA-cam and Netflix but I'll give some of your ideas a try.
I went from 12/1 ADSL to 2500/800 fiber. I don't miss ADSL one bit.
Wow! That is amazing. DSL is so bad.
@@SilverCymbal yup, France decided to get with the times. It's 50€ a month too with tv and landline. Another ISP has a 5 and 8gbps plan as well. Most European countries are so affordable for the internet.
I'm curious, are you going to stick with the actual T-Mobile hardware or use a dedicated 5G/LTE Modem that has exposed SMA antenna connectors instead of taking off the shell of the T-Mobile equipment? Also will you be using something like Ubiquiti UniFi (Dream machine) for Wi-Fi
The T-Mobile is free. They just charge for the service.
@@mlhm5 sure, I don't disagree with that. I guess what I'm saying is sometimes service provided equipment isn't as good as third party dedicated equipment is
Yeah this is just awesome! Thanks for the info! I’m going to be moving to an era where cell phone service may be a problem. This will definitely be an awesome solution!
So nice to see all these people with star link while I’m still waiting for the one I ordered 2+ years ago that allegedly “ships in 2 to 4 weeks”
Copy that, SC.
Thank you.
Now get on your mower and mow.
Very true! Its getting long too
How do you connect the antenna to the T-Mobile device
Look up Nater Tater here on utube......he shows you how to connect the antenna to the TM device.
thank you, i did not know about directional data antennas. while testing for optimal orientation i found that downloading a large file works better since i get an almost immediate continuous feedback compared to speed tests
Thanks for sharing the video Silver. Please plan for a follow up video once you have setup/fixed the antenna. I would be very interested on how you mount it and how you wired it outside.
Where you been man? The past decade or so Tmobile has been literally the BEST of the large carriers. They reinvented themselves a while back with the new CEO guy and they're responsible for why cellphone carriers don't push lock in contracts much anymore and have contractless options now.
Have to agree about T-Mobile 👍🏼
While you can get great speeds, you have to understand that the TMHI is the absolutely bottom of priority over everything else. Most people start off great with TMHI but will run into the wall of speed at some point. Once a tower gets busy, your speeds will drop. Some people will drop to the point of not usable. Your mileage may very. I had to drop TMHI because of this. I hope it works for you!!
Great info and I shared your video with my friend that’s moving rural
This was awesome, thank you!