iPhone 4 Antenna

Posted by iPHi on Tuesday Jul 6, 2010 Under Apple Related, Iphone News, Uncategorized

News about the iPhone 4 antenna is all over the internet.  Bloggers are constantly talking about holding the iPhone 4 a certain way, called the “death grip,” and losing 4 or 5 bars of signal.  But in a PCWorld article, Apple, Inc. released a statement that said there is something wrong with the newest iPhone, but it’s not the antenna.

Apple admitted to using a flawed formula to calculate the number of bars of signal strength.  Spencer Webb, president of AntennaSys, did some tests on the iPhone 4 and found that (almost) everything’s okay with it.  Webb and a co-worker decided to do some tests of their own. Webb stated that “this was a non-scientific test, but it was done by two engineers who deal with RF devices for a living.” 

First, they made a call with the iPhone 4 and held it at the top.  They had no problems with the signal dropping.  Then, they switched and held the iPhone 4 with the “death grip” by holding the bottom of the the phone tightly.  Webb said they were able to make the signal drop 4 or 5 bars but the quality of the call wasn’t affected, and the call never dropped.

After they did this test, they took another iPhone and did the same test on the antenna.  This iPhone, though, was a first-generation iPhone.  They got the same exact results in this test.  This proves that the antenna on the iPhone 4 has nothing wrong with it.  Webb states that “any handheld radio device is going to suffer the same way if you put your hand over the antenna. You’re going to cause a reduction in performance, period. That’s not a news flash.”

The transformation of the cell phone from huge antennas on the top of the phone to an internal antenna means that today’s cell phone users don’t have what Webb calls “antenna consciousness.”  Covering the antenna of any cell phone will affect its performance, so the news swirling around the antenna of the iPhone 4 really isn’t news at all.

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