Forum Discussion
MIMO antenna for T-Mobile 5G home internet gateway?
Hola all -
New T-Mobile home internet user, here. I set up my 5G internet gateway (silver cylinder) this weekend and it works just fine. I have Frontier DSL and Charter Spectrum now and T-Mobile is currently way outperforming Frontier DSL and outperforming Charter Spectrum almost always.
I found this article about installing a MIMO antenna using the internal gateway ports.
https://www.waveform.com/a/b/guides/hotspots/t-mobile-5g-gateway
Has anyone tried it? I would be interested in experiences and results. ¡Gracias de antemano!
- iTinkeralotBandwidth Buff
Extreme care needs to be taken when making the U.Fl connections. If one of those is damaged all is not lost but could cost between $75-125 to have someone replace the damaged connectors. Getting it repaired is much cheaper than what T-Mobile would charge for a damaged unit.
Per Waveform’s guide for antenna connections:
https://www.waveform.com/a/b/guides/hotspots/t-mobile-5g-gateway-arcadyan
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Si tienes un 2x2 MIMO Antenna Kit, disconnect the cables for ports M and D, but leave ports M1 and M2 connected internally.
Be very careful here. U.Fl connectors can be quite fragile. Make sure you're very gentle to avoid breaking the connector.
If you were to get the waveform kit they also have engineers that are very helpful and will provide answers to questions. They are very good at what they do.
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- BsnaveNetwork Novice
Joe4080 wrote:
I mounted them vertically cross polarized, on two separate poles 420 feet away from my house, 20 feet above the ground,on the top of a hill away from my home. The antennas are still below the tree line. I would have to have a 60 ft tower if I were to go above the tree line. The 5G Nokia gateway is also at the antenna site inside a NEMA box that is cooled with fans. The box is from Hana Wireless. My home has a metal roof, so there is now way I would have been able to receive a consistent signal. Right now I just have a ethernet cable laying on the ground.
Every location is different. If your more than 2.50 miles from the tower and have a dense forest like mine, then I would suggest the parabolic antennas. A 4X4 yagi antenna setup might work for you. With the Bolton antennas I can connect to any T-mobile internet 5G tower within 12.5 miles or more. If one tower goes down for repair I can turn the antennas to 1 of 4 towers in my area. Parabolic antennas are much more versatile.
They will take them back. I kept them though.
Hey hopefully you see this from so long ago. I am trying to do a setup like your running the atenna around 400 feet from my home. After you run the ethernet cable do you have another router or distribution center in your home? If you could give more info on your setup that would be great. Gracias
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