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#15
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Isn't it against FCC regulations to use a Cell phone in the air?
John student pilot Newps wrote in message ... I have Verizon. Originally it was Commnet, that turned into Airtouch which then turned into Verizon. I never fail to get a signal if I am at 1000 AGL, unles I am deep in the mountains. I may have to get to the ridge tops then. I have been in the middle of north central South Dakota and the phone has rung and it worked great, other person couldn't tell I was in the air. Right now I use a Kyocera 7135. Replaced the LG 4400 which overall worked great. Before that I had the Motorola T720, that was probably the worst phone I've ever had, although having nothing to do with its in flight qualities. I have found Motorola phones to have the worst receivers. My wife has a Kyocera 414 after just replacing the Kyocera 3135. All work great in the plane and in fringe areas on the ground. John Clonts wrote: "Newps" wrote in message ... Cockpit Colin wrote: If it costs them that much then they don't know what they're doing. There are two companies making these that I'm aware of that don't come close to this cost and several headset manufacturers that add them to their headsets. That was my (uninformed) opinion too - unfortunately I had to eat humble pie when I started asking the designers some "pointed" questions. For starters, as I said in a previous post, you have to compare apples with apples. Show me the microprocessor in the headset interface - show me the intercom - show me the seperate satelite phone connection - show me the individual controls over input / output levels for all of the above. Show me how some of the competing products raise the mic bias level to actually make an incompatible headset compatible (and is fine tuned even more by adjustment of the mic volume). That's called overkill. I have no idea what's in my cellset. Don't care. The cellphone volume is the same as the radio volume, you don't realize how important that is until you use a unit that doesn't do that. Unit works flawlessly, it rings in my headset and people on the other end cannot tell I'm in the plane. If I didn't tell them that I was flying they would never know it. I built a little L shaped stand that is velcroed to my windshield so the phone antenna is always looking outside, always get a signal and makes it easy to dial while in flight. What cellphone and service are you using, and what sort of success have you had in doing that (altitudes, coverage)? Thanks, John Clonts Temple, Texas N7NZ |
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