4 Things You Didn't Know that Affect Your Cell Cam Signal

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 22 ก.ค. 2024
  • Ever find yourself monitoring your cell camera and notice a drop in signal strength or maybe worse yet...lose signal all together? One of the most common issues with cellular trail cameras is loss of signal or varying signal strength. At times it can be the camera or power source related, other times it's not so black and white. From our research and experience, here our the top 4 external items that can affect the signal strength of your cellular trail camera.
    WEATHER
    Understanding that your cellular trail camera moves data to the established cellular network through the environment via radio frequencies/radio waves, RF, is paramount. Also, understanding how environmental factors inhibit or alter RF is key to understanding how weather may be impacting your cellular trail camera signal.
    Precipitation/Moisture - Any water in the atmosphere between your cell camera and the communicating tower is not an ideal thing. Water impedes the radio waves used to transmit data on frequencies used by cellular network providers. That boils down to rain, snow, fog, humidity, and clouds can all cause a decrease in cell signal. Engineers call this the "propagation delay affect", where the water vapors reflect or refract radio waves due to H2O conductive properties. The more dense the water vapor, the worse the effect is....So heavy rain is not a good thing
    Lightning - Aside from the common associated rain shower, lightning presents issues from electrical interference. While it's rare for a single bolt to affect your cell signal, ongoing storms due have the potential for interference. There's also the obvious... a lightning strike of an actual tower. While towers are outfitted with lightning rods and extensive grounding systems, maintenance of these items are typically foregone by tower owners causing more common outages than most people realize.
    OBSTRUCTIONS
    A common thing we see occurs around spring green up. Folks have great signal all through winter, great signal into spring and then all of sudden the camera slowly loses signal. Heavy canopied forest can dramatically cut down on your trail camera's ability to gain signal. Luckily, this also works in our advantage come fall when foliage begins to fall. One good rule of thumb we tell our customers when placing cell cameras in the summer months is that if you have 2 or 3 bars of service under a heavy canopy, you will likely have better signal throughout the fall when the leaves start to drop. Another great way to combat the loss of signal due to heavy canopies is to add an external high gain antenna to your cell camera. There are a multitude of options out there including the Exodus directional antenna specifically for Verizon 4G and LTE networks, be sure what you are purchasing is compatible with your cell camera.
    NETWORK LOAD
    Peak usage hours are king here. Many of you likely already experience this with your mobile phone. Maybe it's slower speeds when browsing the web on your smartphone, it may take longer to send texts or phones, or maybe you just tend to drop calls. The bottom line is every cellular network has some type of "traffic" capacity and during certain hours of the day, peak usage. Cellular provider try to plan ahead and provide "overflow" networks, limit certain devices during these times, and/or limit speeds. This is similar to "data throttling" on mobile devices when monthly data limits are reached.
    TOWER MAINTENANCE
    Unfortunately, it's next to impossible to verify if you're loss of signal is from downed equipment or camera failure. If you're tech savvy enough to use the built in dBm tool on your mobile phone you can do a quick test at the camera's location and know. Keep in mind, most maintenance outages are short lived so your response and in field testing would have to fairly time sensitive to have any kind of accuracy.
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ความคิดเห็น • 15

  • @-G-Mac-
    @-G-Mac- ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Bears. Bears chewing on your camera, especially the antenna, will reduce your signal to zero.

  • @jaseotto8785
    @jaseotto8785 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Great listen for every cell cam user!

  • @paulcrave3112
    @paulcrave3112 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Hats off to Exodus for always providing educational content.
    Excellent customer service and excellent products. Thanks Chad.

  • @jake-hofer
    @jake-hofer 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    So many variables! Great to know these as a starting point to figure out what could be going on.

  • @camthecameraman5096
    @camthecameraman5096 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Great points with the foliage! I’ve definitely seen that happen

  • @chadsyl23
    @chadsyl23 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    This is a really important video for everyone!

  • @lucasjones1922
    @lucasjones1922 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I noticed this when the county fair came to town a mile away from my property because of the network load. The signal on my cell camera dropped when it was going on but as soon as it was over and there weren't 1,000+ people on their phones right down the road the signal strength went back up to full coverage.

  • @gradyrobinson-shaw6079
    @gradyrobinson-shaw6079 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    The more you know, thanks for all the information

  • @shoot4fun302
    @shoot4fun302 ปีที่แล้ว

    About a year ago, on a Sunday, my Cuddeback stopped sending pics. I checked the signal with my phone, and it was 2-3 bars like always, and I could call or text from the same location as the camera. Cuddeback replaced the camera twice to no avail. I took one of the new ones into town, where it worked fine. The only thing that I can surmise is that AT&T(Hell be upon them) degraded the signal or the band width on the local tower for unknown reasons. I just bought a directional antenna to try, but I have little confidence that it's going to work.

  • @jonathanadams3490
    @jonathanadams3490 ปีที่แล้ว

    When I’m close to my cell cam it has 2 bars of signal but when I move say 20 feet away it drops completely and I have no idea why

  • @georgemullin7772
    @georgemullin7772 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I have an industrial work place tower a kilometer away it I helped my phone big time nothing on my trail cam it doesn't recognize the tower

  • @phyllisross3606
    @phyllisross3606 ปีที่แล้ว

    Does this effect a camera mounted inside a camp

  • @alanshaw4655
    @alanshaw4655 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    easy way ?..simple..if your cell phone does not get signal ..then you can bet your bottom dollar a cell cam wont either !.

  • @joeellis2692
    @joeellis2692 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    All this money for cell camera's and the technology is no where near to what it needs to be. I got a $300 paperweight.