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June 24, 2022 — by NICHOLAS JONES
SHARE ARTICLE[Sassy_Social_Share total_shares="ON"]You rely heavily on your smartphone, and access to cellular devices is pretty much ubiquitous these days. All this technology makes it pretty frustrating when your phone keeps dropping calls. Why is strong cell coverage still so hard to come by sometimes?
Most likely, you know what it’s like to be on a call when the connection drops out. Or maybe you’re using your phone’s map to find an unfamiliar address, and it suddenly quits working because there’s no signal. Now, what do you do? Drive around in hopes of picking up the signal again?
Read on to learn what causes your phone to keep dropping calls and how to fix the problem.
A dropped call happens when your phone gets disconnected somehow from the cellular network. Usually, this happens because of poor cell signal wherever you are, and the lack of connectivity can’t support your call.
Whether you have an iPhone or Android phone, we all love to blame our cell service providers for poor coverage and dropped calls. But the truth is, most of the time it’s not their fault.
More often, the culprit is something between us and the cell tower that blocks the signal, or your distance from the cell tower. The signal-blocking obstacles can be man-made or natural, but the result is the same.
This is almost always the first thing we focus on when calls keep dropping. After all, since cellular signals are radio frequency waves, they behave like any other RF signal. Think about the FM radio in a car. If the receiver (in this case your cell phone or tablet) is too far away from the signal source – for our purposes, a cell tower – then the signal will be weak or maybe undetectable. You’ll probably get static or a dropped signal altogether.
Local terrain like hills, mountains, ridges, bluffs, and similar terrain will block cell signals. Any situation in which there is higher ground between your phone and the cell tower can cause signal issues.
Vegetation like trees, shrubbery, or other types of foliage can refract RF signals and interfere with your cell reception. Ask anyone who lives in a heavily wooded area how their cellular reception is. They’ll tell you – trees are wonderful things, but they do NOT enhance cell signal.
Atmospheric conditions like poor weather can also interfere with your signal. Even dust particles in the air can reflect and refract RF signals. A foggy day? Water vapor can diffuse RF signals.
If your cell phone drops a call in your house, the building itself could be blocking your cell reception. RF waves don’t easily penetrate the brick, metal siding, concrete, steel, coated glass and other materials that form the exterior of most modern buildings.
In urban areas, even when you’re outdoors, large buildings and other structures can deflect or distort RF waves and mess up your cell reception.
Most of us have experienced a disconnected call while inside a vehicle, and then noticed an improvement in voice quality or data speed once we step outside. Those metal-and-glass encased vehicles we drive do an excellent job of blocking cell phone signals. Research shows that, on average, cell signal strength drops by about 30 percent inside a vehicle.
When these elements stack up against you and your phone keeps dropping calls, slowing texts, or buffering data, what can you do? Here are some simple tips and tricks to help you find a solid cell connection.
In addition to the general causes listed above, there are several reasons that your iPhone might drop calls.
1) You may have a damaged SIM card. If it’s been damaged for any reason (often a dropped phone, or a poorly inserted card) then you could drop calls on your iPhone. If your SIM card is bent, chipped, broken, or not properly inserted, your phone could keep dropping calls. Here are some things to try:
2) This may sound simple but try restarting your phone. Power the phone off and wait for a few seconds, then turn it back on. See if that fixes the problems of dropped calls.
3) Close background apps. So many of us switch from app to app that we forget what’s running on the phone, and soon we have twenty or thirty apps running at once. That’s another cache memory issue, and it could cause your phone drop calls.
4) Activate your Caller ID. Another non-intuitive solution here: if you go to Settings, then Phone, then Show My Caller ID, this might fix the problem.
5) One more strange trick: set your iPhone’s time and date automatically. This is particularly an issue if you’ve traveled recently and crossed time zones. Connect to WiFi, then go to Settings, then General, then Date and Time, and see if Set Automatically is turned on. If it isn’t, turn it on.
6) If nothing else works, try checking to see if your carrier has any updates. If there have been updates you haven’t installed, that could be why your phone keeps dropping calls. Go to Settings, then General, then About. If there’s an update available, one will pop up and you can install it. If nothing pops up, this isn’t the issue.
There could be many reasons your Verizon phone is dropping calls. Some of them include:
The best thing you can do when you suffer from dropped calls is get a cell phone signal booster. This is a permanent solution to improve cell coverage inside a home, building, or vehicle. Cell signal boosters take existing cell signal – even if it’s weak – and amplify it to give you better cell service and end the frustration of dropped calls. weBoost cell phone signal boosters work with all cell carriers, networks, and devices. We offer a 30-day money-back guarantee and 2-year warranty.
Fed up because your phone keeps dropping calls? Shop weBoost solutions for your home, business, or vehicle.
TAGS: Education, How To