Boating NZ

Boost your phone

- BY NORMAN HOLTZHAUSE­N

Boaties venturing offshore know how quickly a phone loses signal bars – and data apps become patchy at best. The combinatio­n of poor signal strength and the phone’s low antenna height limits communicat­ion with the closest cellular tower. But there is a solution.

Mobile phones have become an integral part of our lives and with services like Google Maps making printed roadmaps pretty much redundant, data is essential. Similarly, when you’re out on the water, navigation aids, real-time weather updates, sea surface temperatur­e maps and marine apps all rely on cellular data. So you need to boost the signal.

Installing a mobile booster antenna on your boat is a simple, relatively cheap solution, but there’s an inherent problem: no modern smartphone allows you to plug an external antenna directly into it. This means you also have to add a mobile router device to create a Wifi hotspot, running off its own network SIM card. You then have to configure your mobile to connect to that hotspot, and it only carries data – voice calls and text messages don’t work as they’re not carried over Wifi.

The best solution would be your own private cellular base station, something that will move around with your boat and provide five bars of cell coverage to your mobile device. That base station can use a large external antenna mounted high on the boat to greatly increase range and signal strength from even the weakest and most distant land-based cell tower. It should provide both 3G and 4G coverage (and ideally be 5G-ready as well) so your mobile phone can use whatever signal is best for voice, text and data services.

Another benefit of a local base station is that your mobile device’s battery will last much longer. When a cell phone detects a weak signal it boosts its own transmitti­ng power, which considerab­ly reduces the battery life. You might have noticed this out on the

water: your cell phone runs low on battery power far faster than it does around home. With a strong local signal it will only need to use minimal power.

Powertec is an Australasi­an distributo­r of marine cellular booster solutions, with an office in Auckland. It provides a range of solutions for rural, industrial, camping and marine installati­ons. The Cel-fi Mobile Signal Repeater is the heart of its solution, and the technology was exhibited at the recent Fieldays expo at Mystery Creek.

Made in California, the Cel-fi system combines three elements: an omni-directiona­l high-gain external antenna, the Cel-fi Go2 unit, and an internal cellular antenna to provide coverage everywhere in your boat. The external antenna operates much like a VHF antenna and is mounted as high as possible on the boat roof or on a mast. It talks to the cellular network and has a claimed range of up to 100km.

Georgia Crowley, Account Manager for Powertec in New Zealand, gave us a rundown of the system. They have been targeting the rural market in New Zealand, where mobile coverage is often either poor or non-existent. By installing the high-gain antenna in a suitable location farmers can achieve coverage over a much wider area.

Crowley says the marine market is another growth area, where the effective mobile range has declined ever since Spark (previously Telecom) decommissi­oned the old 025 network. Many commercial and game fishing boats had car-model base stations installed on board and have enjoyed excellent coverage even quite far offshore.

But the increased data speeds of the newer technologi­es (first 3G, then 4G and now 5G) each come with the trade-off of ever-reducing range. This is countered on land by building more cell towers, but that’s hard to do out at sea. So the solution is to take your own base station with you.

The Cel-fi Go2 Network Repeater has a USA NEMA 4 rating, which is the equivalent to IP65 but with additional corrosion resistance. It can be installed just about anywhere on the boat and does not require any special protection.

The last component of the kit, the cellular antenna, needs to be suitably located so all the cabins on a larger boat get good coverage. This is really only an issue for larger vessels with multiple cabins. They have a surface mount option for this element – it’s a nice, discreet solution.

Once installed, the system essentiall­y operates effectivel­y as its own cell site – there is NO reconfigur­ation required on your mobile devices. The device simply works as before, with all functions (data/ voice/text) fully operationa­l.

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 ??  ?? LEFT A typical installati­on on a launch.
LEFT A typical installati­on on a launch.
 ??  ?? LEFT The Blackhawk cellular antenna, and right, the high-gain Omni marine antenna.
LEFT The Blackhawk cellular antenna, and right, the high-gain Omni marine antenna.
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