- nothing is guaranteed to be "simple"...
Hi Zachary,
The two graphs are very useful to finetune a connection, but the dynamic scale on the Y axis is confusing at times.
If possible, please fix it from 0 to -120 dB/dBm.
When a signal is greater than -100, the scale becomes slightly smaller, but this is confusing...
Signals between -90 and -105 are the 'sensitive' zone, and anything weaker than -110 is not useful (imho).
Fwiw, I have been using Hint Control on my Android phone with 1000 ms (1 sec) for both the data update and the widget refresh. This allows me to monitor in near real-time the S/N as a function of antenna orientation. We have a Waveform Quad Mini and I have been able to find the best orientation to maintain a strong connection via 5g NR on band n71 that offers us the best service via T-Mobile Home Internet connected via an Arcadyan G4AR gateway...
... but the signal does degrade sometimes which may be a function of the weather (temperature, especially). Small adjustments sometimes make a significant difference.
Thanks again for your useful contribution...
Ed
Hi Zachary,
The two graphs are very useful to finetune a connection, but the dynamic scale on the Y axis is confusing at times.
If possible, please fix it from 0 to -120 dB/dBm.
When a signal is greater than -100, the scale becomes slightly smaller, but this is confusing...
Signals between -90 and -105 are the 'sensitive' zone, and anything weaker than -110 is not useful (imho).
Fwiw, I have been using Hint Control on my Android phone with 1000 ms (1 sec) for both the data update and the widget refresh. This allows me to monitor in near real-time the S/N as a function of antenna orientation. We have a Waveform Quad Mini and I have been able to find the best orientation to maintain a strong connection via 5g NR on band n71 that offers us the best service via T-Mobile Home Internet connected via an Arcadyan G4AR gateway...
... but the signal does degrade sometimes which may be a function of the weather (temperature, especially). Small adjustments sometimes make a significant difference.
Thanks again for your useful contribution...
Ed