09-19-2019 08:03 PM - edited 01-05-2022 07:11 AM
My apartment building of only 80 units recently changed over to a lobby intercom system whereby when visitors buzz you to get in it goes through your cell rather than a landline. This building is ions behind is all I can say. Anyhow since I am now being notified through my cellphone my regular calls are dropping and I'm constantly 'breaking up' to people on the other end. Veryyyy annoying. This has started happening since the switchover and it never happened before it. My question is could this be in relation to now having the intercom programmed to my cell or is it just a coincidence?
Thanks in advance.
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09-19-2019 11:00 PM
There might still be other things in your home which interfere with your cellular signal.
RFI/EMI from badly-shielded electrical systems, transformers, inverters, neon signs, flourescent lights, microwave ovens, electromechanical cash registers, pinball machines, commercial or amateur radio transmitters, industrial machinery, all sorts of stuff.
Everything is supposedly isolated to prevent interference (by technology, by hardware, by design, and by FCC regulations) but the reality is that we live in a noisy world filled with lots of substandard or "aeons old" stuff.
And your building might just have sucky cell reception for other reasons. Concrete and metal. Bad terrain. Low signal bars, fringe service area, not enough towers, etc.
09-19-2019 09:00 PM - edited 09-19-2019 09:08 PM
@lake wrote:Thanks I will. Never thought of that.
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There being a correlation with dropped calls and the intercom is highly unlikely. Even if the buzz-in procedure is causing higher than normal cell network usage, your front door system can only be making one phone call at a time, so its not a network capacity issue.
09-19-2019 08:44 PM
Thanks I will. Never thought of that.
09-19-2019 08:31 PM
@lake If you have access to another phone to test your sim card with that will help you determine if you are having a hardware issue with your current device.
09-19-2019 08:19 PM
Thankyou.
09-19-2019 08:16 PM - edited 09-19-2019 08:17 PM
@lakeIt is probably coincidence. As one is not related to another.