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2.4GHz-Friendly Phones?

da3dAlus writes "When I first bought my 2.4GHz wireless phone system several years ago, it was a rather new technology, and wi-fi wasn't even on the scene. Now it appears that all wireless phones are on the 2.4 or 5.8 GHz spectrum, and I've got neighbors with wi-fi (with myself included). While checking out new phones recently, I've noticed some are carrying a "802.11 Friendly" sticker. The question is, are there any trully 802.11 friendly phones? Has anyone really ever had a problem with these types of phones interfering with their wi-fi network?"

22 of 386 comments (clear)

  1. 900mhz? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Mine 900mhz cordless phone even has spread spectrum. Works great, excellent range.

    1. Re:900mhz? by badasscat · · Score: 4, Informative

      We're talking about cordless, not cellular. You furriners need to read for comprehension.

      Pot kettle black.

      Someone apparently doesn't know that 900mhz cordless phones exist, and all of them are wi-fi friendly. I myself have a Panasonic 900mhz digital spread spectrum phone and have no problems at all with my wi-fi when using it.

  2. Why YES, I have had problems by johncel · · Score: 5, Interesting

    So, I had a linksys wifi router and an AT&T 2.4 gHz phone... They fought like dogs! If the phone rang, wifi was out for at least 5 mins after you hung up. What a pain. I finally just bought a 5.8 gHz phone.

    --
    Don't violate your system's integrity, choose linux...
  3. It doesn't interfere, silly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    It interoperates. If it finds an open port on your wifi network, it will handover and use VoIP to complete the call.

    This saves you money in the long run because VoIP is much cheaper cost-wise than typical cell service.

    The main thing is to make sure that the phone is SAR-approved. You don't want those microwaves heating up your neural tissue! :-)

  4. Are they nuts?! by Pan+T.+Hose · · Score: 5, Funny

    24GHz?! Who the hell would need such a fast phone is beyond me! I have a 500MHz AMD in my desktop (Debian) and it works just fine, thank you.

    --
    Sincerely,
    Pan Tarhei Hosé, PhD.
    "Homo sum et cogito ergo odi profanum vulgus et libido."
  5. Vtech by jcostantino · · Score: 5, Informative
    We just bought a Vtech 2.4ghz phone system - two handsets, one base w/ answering machine and a base with a charger. The system said "2.4ghz Friendly" and it replaced a Vtech 2.4ghz phone bought earlier in the year (and subsequently killed during a storm) which would knock the 802.11 offline unless I set my AP to channel 6.

    I haven't bothered to change the AP to a different channel but so far it's working fine.

    Worthy of mention is that the new handsets come with speakerphone and use three NiMH AAA cells instead of a shrinkwrapped battery with a lead. Plus they sound great and I don't have the problem I used to have on the older phone where the microphone was too sensitive and I heard background noise at too high a level in the earpiece.

    --
    Reviews with a twist! http://www.sardonicbastard.com
  6. 2.4 GHz phones == bad idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    I've gone back to the older 900 MHz phones since installing a WiFi network at home. The WLAN didn't interfere with the 2.4 GHz cordless phones we had, but the phones knock the network down hard. I haven't heard anything about "802.11 friendly" labels on newer 2.4 GHz phones, but I'd be skeptical. If they work at all, they work by adaptively locating an empty part of the 2.4 GHz spectrum, and around many crowded residental areas, there ain't no such thing no mo'.

    You can also get 5 GHz phones, too. Either 900 MHz or 5 GHz is fine, just keep 'em off 2.4 GHz.

  7. WiFi and 2.4GHz Don't Mix by pbwiz · · Score: 5, Informative

    WiFi (802.11b) and 2.4GHz Phones almost always will clash -- but there is a good article on wifi planet that gives some things that can be done to lessen interference.
    http://www.wi-fiplanet.com/tutorials/article.php/2 191241/
    Of course, the best solution is a 900MHz or 5.8GHz Cordless Phone.

  8. why 0.9Ghz is better by infonick · · Score: 4, Interesting

    900Mhz phones:

    1) are inexpensive;
    2) do no interfere with the 5Ghz and 2.4Ghz wifi channles;
    3) do no interfere with Bluetooth;
    4) are inexpensive;
    5) will get better range because of the lower frequency used.

    --

    You are confusing me with someone who cares.
    1. Re:why 0.9Ghz is better by CMRichar · · Score: 5, Funny
      i think you forgot:

      6)are inexpensive.

      --
      "Good night, good work, sleep well, I'll most likely kill you in the morning." - Dread Pirate Roberts
    2. Re:why 0.9Ghz is better by bogie · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Companies went with 2.4GHz so they could sell the same products to people again. Although the latest 2.4 phones are probably ok for years 2.4GHz phones had shit reception compared to their 900MHz predecessors. There is zero doubt in my mind that most 2.4GHz phones were not equal to their 900MHz counterparts when they first came out. I used to hear echo and bad reception constantly on 2.4GHz phones while 900MHz just worked. Plus even now 2.4GHz models can have a nack of interfering with wireless which you and especially your neighbors probably won't like.

      --
      If you wanna get rich, you know that payback is a bitch
    3. Re:why 0.9Ghz is better by bwalzer · · Score: 5, Informative
      Free space loss for radio transmissions (in dB): L(f,d)=20.log(f*d)+92.5

      ...

      So obviously L(2.4GHz,d) > L(0.9GHz,d). Meaning lower frequency leads to less loss (further reach).

      Which is true, but misleading. Fascinating RF engineering trivia follows;

      The variable L is often called "free space path loss". This sort of path loss increases with frequency. But where is the actual loss? This is supposed to be in free space, i.e. vacuum. Since there isn't anything in vacuum to heat up or whatever the loss can't be in the actual path between the antennas (which is why the "path loss" bit is misleading).

      It's because of the antennas. An efficient omnidirectional transmitting antenna will radiate pretty much all the power you feed it. An omnidirectional receiving antenna will receive power proportional to it's size. Obviously larger antennas will collect more power. Rather than giving each antenna a separate transmit gain and receive gain the RF engineering types just fudge it with the idea of "free space path loss".

      So yes, you will end up with more signal at the receive antenna of a 0.9GHz as opposed to a 2,4GHz phone. The formula is correct in that. After all the receive antenna is 2.7 times bigger. That's a whole 8 dB more signal. Of course the larger antenna will receive noise that much better too (and there tends to be a lot at 900MHz). The 900 MHz antenna will probably be so large that you will only be able to get one in a handset (some 900MHz phones actually have an extendable antenna). If the 2.4GHz faction puts more than one antenna in their handset and then has the phone pick the one with the best signal, they will probably win in practice.

      Real path loss caused by things like building materials and trees does tend to go up with frequency. OTOH higher frequency signals can squeeze though smaller holes. It's all a bit complicated. I personally suspect that free space path loss isn't a significant factor in the actual range you end up with.

  9. Re:My microwave by John+Miles · · Score: 5, Informative

    Household microwave ovens spew a lot of 2.4 GHz energy all over the band (enough that after looking at it on a spectrum analyzer, I no longer feel like pressing my face up to the window to see if the cheese on my pizza has melted yet).

    However, they radiate only on alterating half-cycles of the 60 Hz line frequency. There may be a config option in your WLAN hardware's client utility to make it more resistant to microwave-oven leakage by forcing transmission of smaller packets. You'll lose some performance if you enable it, but it should keep your WLAN from going down altogether.

    --
    Dahlmann tightly grips the knife, which he may have no idea how to use, and steps out into the plain.
  10. Re:No problems in my house by jwcorder · · Score: 4, Informative
    Not to nig your post here, but there is no way he cracked YOUR WAP with NetStumbler unless he just left it for about 2 months.

    The way NetStumbler works is that it looks for "special" packets that have weak keys. Once it gets enough of these (a million is a good number) it can crack your WEP. The only problem with this is that the average home with one or two wireless connections would have to send constant data for months and months before there would be enough packets sniffed to crack it.

    A business would do it in a week probably if they had say 25-50 wireless users, but 1-3 wireless connections wouldn't be enough data to even bother sniffing out.

    Not like I know ANYTHING about doing this kind of stuff though....

    --
    http://jayceecorder.blogspot.com
  11. I know that by Pan+T.+Hose · · Score: 5, Funny

    24GHz?! Who the hell would need such a fast phone is beyond me! I have a 500MHz AMD in my desktop (Debian) and it works just fine, thank you.

    ARE YOU NUTS? Obviously they left out a dot on the frequency. The frequency your phone transmits on has nothing to do with speed like a processor. Get out of here.....

    I know there are other important speed-wise factors as well, the most important one being not the clock frequency itself but whether the chip has 64 bits or not. Nevertheless, I don't think anyone would ever need more than 640MHz.

    --
    Sincerely,
    Pan Tarhei Hosé, PhD.
    "Homo sum et cogito ergo odi profanum vulgus et libido."
  12. Re:I have always had one or more of these wireless by MrAndrews · · Score: 4, Informative

    I actually found a conflict between the wireless phones and wifi to be rather widespread. At my house we had a problem where if you were closer to the base station with your laptop than the phone was to its base station, the phone wouldn't always ring --- and then if you were further away with the laptop the phone would drop your internet while it was ringing. Can't say I've checked out newer phones... we've switched to iChat AV and cell phones for all our telecommunications needs :)

  13. Re:5.8 by Aaden42 · · Score: 5, Informative
    From: http://www.vocal.com/data_sheets/80211a_fre.html
    The 5 GHz U-NII frequency bans is segmented into three 100 MHz bands for operation in the US. The lower band ranges from 5.15 -5.25 GHz, the middle band ranges from 5.25-5.35 GHz and the upper band ranges from 5.725-5.825 GHz.

    So odds are a 5.8GHz phone would mess with the upper range of 802.11a.

  14. Joining the 900 MHz crowd.. by cmowire · · Score: 5, Informative

    The cordless phone manufacturers have been playing quite a game over the past decade. They keep trying to get you to upgrade phones to a "higher" megahertz phone because they know that you are already being told by Intel to upgrade your CPU to a "higher" megahertz CPU.

    So, here's the thing. It's a general rule that as you go up in megahertz, the ability to penetrate walls goes down. Thus, the higher the megahertz, the lower the effective range. Consumer Reports did some tests here and showed that this carries over to reality. This is also why Verizon Wireless tends to have better reception -- they are primarily on the 850 MHz band instead of the 1900 MHz band.

    So what have you gotten by upgrading to an "advanced" 2.4 or 5.8 GHz phone? Less range, although generally enough range to make it around a "normal" house.

    Now, in order to produce a device that works in the 900 MHz, 2.4 GHz or 5.8 GHz band without a license the FCC requires you to be spread-spectrum.

    There's some upsides and downsides here. First, some of the spread-spectrum devices, most notably older ones, didn't use very good spread-spectrum methods.

    Second, in *theory* if everything's optimized properly, you can use some number of devices and they will all be perceived as "noise" to all of the other devices. So as you add more functioning devices in general, they will all start to experience interference. The problem is when devices using conflicting spread spectrum techniques are in use.

    Third, microwaves and other such RF-heating applications, are covered underneath a different set of FCC rules, which generally are built around not causing your eyeballs to be fried overeasy (your eyeballs are the first thing to suffer damage from microwaves, which is why staring at the microwave window is not the world's brightest idea) Microwaves are supposed to be Faraday cages, but sometimes there's a leak. I'd start to wonder about my Microwave's safety if it started interfering with my WiFi, mind you.

    Fourth, if there's interference and undesired performance, you have essentially no recourse. I've been thinking that they really should have allocated a frequency band that's reserved for only devices using a 802.11-standard protocol, but that decision really should have been made a long time ago. Oh, and if you start interfering with something important (That's the "Harmfull Interference" they speak of on the FCC warning on the back of a device) you can and will have government folks knocking on your doorstep. There have been documented cases of equipment interfering with aircraft navigation signals from the ground, which makes the airlines very unhappy and tends to get investigated. ;)

    I'm really wondering what the "Wifi-Friendly" cordless phones are actually. Especially given that VTech is the folks who are advertising it. As I've mentioned above, in *theory* any device on the 900 MHz, 2.4 GHz, and 5.4/5.8 GHz ISM bands (they are actually the same thing) shouldn't prevent each other from working and should just be perceivable as noise Also, *in theory*, one could "do better" by listening for 802.11b/g activity and actively routing around it. This is the big difference between Bluetooth 1.1 and 1.2. But that's more circuitry, so I'm not entirely sure if they are actually doing that, or they just put them in a test lab to see what happens. They'll probably insist that it took years of engineering time and it's a special feature, even if it's more the second. ;)

    I personally have just stuck to 900 MHz phones. Like I said, all things being equal, they tend to have longer range. Plus, I figure that having absolutely no interference is better than having a measured amount while the phone is in use. ;)

    Sure my WiFi uses 802.11b, which is 2.4 GHz, but there's some darn good reasons for why one should keep 802.11a around.

    The main one is that 802.11a is usually faster than 802.11g at close range. So I have a halfassed

    1. Re:Joining the 900 MHz crowd.. by 0111+1110 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Good post. I was going to mod you up, but I'd like to make a minor correction instead. As many have stated, the "penetration ability" of RF waves is inversely proportional to frequency (proportional to wavelength). For getting through building structures the best are 46/49 Mhz phones followed by 900, 2.4, and 5.8. What no one has (yet) mentioned is that higher frequencies do give better range for unobstructed line-of-sight transmission. Higher frequencies require less power (especially important for handsets) to propogate through empty space. The problem lies with obstructions like walls.

      Anyone who has tried to use a handheld GPS while hiking in dense forest has seen that even 1227 or 1575 Mhz is a high enough frequency to have difficulty penetrating the leaves on trees (at least at such low power).

      So as long as you can actually see your base a 5.8 Ghz cordless phone (RF transmitter) will give you the greatest range, but in any situation with obstructions it will give you the least range per unit of output power.

      46 Mhz is such a low frequency that it penetrates walls easily without losing much power, but it is less efficient at open-space propogation (per watt). 900 Mhz seems to be a nearly perfect balance (perhaps 450 Mhz might be better). The frequency is high enough that open space propagation is very efficient, but still low enough that it will penetrate walls with some effectiveness.

      Spread spectrum is not a form of "frequency hopping" in most cordless phones. It is a form of "wideband" transmission. It does not actually "hop" per se (although there are exceptions). It does allow for greater power and range. The longest range cordless phones for most people who live indoors in a multi-room house is a 900 Mhz spread spectrum phone.

      I bought as many of these as I could because I knew that MarketSpeak would win over RF theory and that truly long range cordless phones would probably become unavailable.

      --
      Quite an experience to live in fear, isn't it? That's what it is to be a slave.
    2. Re:Joining the 900 MHz crowd.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Almost correct. 1 watt is 1 watt at any frequency. Tell hams that lower frequencies won't carry as far but stand back if you don't want get get wet from the laughter you get back. What higher frequencies do is allow higher gain antennas with less space. The least, effective, antenna is 1/4 of the wavelength of the frequency (with ground plane) 1/2 without a ground. Frequecy goes up wavelength goes down. To make a 1/4 wave antenna at 49MHz you need over 4 feet. The same 1/4 wave antenna at 900MHz needs only 3/4 inch. 900 MHz is a very good balance for cordless phone. High enough frequency for small antennas, low enough to penetrate walls and such. Also the FCC allow greater power output at higher frequencies. 4 watts EIRP (1 watt into a 6db gain antenna) at 2.4GHz and 16 watts at 5.8 GHz. The requirements at 49MHz are much lower.

  15. Re:My microwave by Smurf · · Score: 5, Funny

    No more skull-to-the-microwave-window pressing for me either.

    Uhh... but you DO press your skull against the phone handset, which allegedly transmits a stronger signal (at least at that frequency)...

    May I recommend a tin foil hat? ;)

  16. Re:5.8 by stilwebm · · Score: 5, Informative

    The other question is, will the 5.8 interfere?

    I have an AT&T 5840 phone that uses 5.8GHz but if you read the fine print in the specifications, it also uses 2.4GHz:

    • RF Frequency Band (Handset to base): 2400 MHz - 2483.5 MHz
    • RF Frequency Band (Base to handset): 5725 MHz - 5850 MHz

    All 802.11b/g devices use channels within 2412 MHz - 2483.5 MHz, so there is quite a bit of overlap there. When shopping around, I noticed that many 5.8 GHz phones actually use 2.4 GHz as well. In my limited use of 802.11b in the vicinity of this phone, I noticed no interference, but ymmv.