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Cell phones: AT&T Selection: Best Reception in Rural Areas (WA)

by us1roberts - 2/28/08 10:28 AM
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Post 1 of 3

AT&T Selection: Best Reception in Rural Areas (WA)

by us1roberts - 2/28/08 10:28 AM

I am trying to upgrade a phone for my mother on my phone plan. She lives in a semi-rural area in Western Washington (about 25 miles south of Tacoma). We both currently use a Sony Ericsson z525a but she only receives spotty service at her house. Her friend who has an LG that is a few years old, can actually make and receive calls at her house, while the Sony can only send/receive text messages and voicemail. On a good clear day if you contort yourself just right in the window, you can call out, for about 5 seconds. This is literally the edge of the service area and could also be due to many large fir trees as the phones work great about 100ft down the street.

What I need to know is which manufacturers typically have the strongest signal reception? What are the best options out of AT&T's current lineup? We will probably switch in a month. I plan on getting a Blackberry Pearl, she'll probably take anything that's free to about $25. She's a cell phone minimalist, uses about 30 minutes a month on the bill, no cameras, wants biger buttons and a easy to read screen. I live in the city and don't have a land line. I just want to make sure this time around she can make the most of her cell phone and possibly ditch her overpriced land line too.

Post 2 of 3

Just checked with a friend in Nebraska.

by R. Proffitt Moderator - 2/28/08 11:13 AM In reply to: AT&T Selection: Best Reception in Rural Areas (WA) by us1roberts

The consensus is to not go with ATT. His 20 buck trackfone on GSM is better at coverage. Remember, it's not the phone, it's the towers.

Bob

Post 3 of 3

We've verified coverage...

by us1roberts - 2/28/08 1:37 PM In reply to: Just checked with a friend in Nebraska. by R. Proffitt Moderator

Unfortunately in Washington, ATT has the best coverage area. We've tried them all (Verizon, Qwest, T-Mobile, Sprint (is a joke here) and ATT is the only one that seems to actually have 1 bar at her house. Like I said, other ATT customers have no problems, so at that point it becomes dependent on the phone. I had a brick Nokia work there, but not a Motorola. Her friend has some old LG and it calls in/out great with ATT in that area. I have heard that older phones with a pull out antenna tend to get a smidge more reception than phones with internal antennas.

I've tried to convince her to do the "go-phone" set up but she'd never refill the minutes and that'd be about the time an emergency arises.

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