Difference between revisions of "Cell blocked"
Line 17: | Line 17: | ||
*WCDMA / UMTS - ATT, TMobile | *WCDMA / UMTS - ATT, TMobile | ||
− | None of these technologies are decodable by an analog scanner, | + | None of these technologies are decodable by an analog scanner, therefore the block is no longer necessary. |
[[Category:HAM Radio]] | [[Category:HAM Radio]] |
Revision as of 23:20, 12 July 2015
Cell blocked (or cellular blocked) is a phrase applied to scanners and wideband receivers manufactured for sale in the US which denotes that they comply with the provisions of PL 102-556, which amended Section 302 of the Communications Act 47USC302 - to prohibit manufacture, importation, or certification of scanners which could receive the frequency band allocated for analog AMPS - a type of Mobile Phone Network Technology, "the frequencies allocated to the domestic cellular radio telecommunications service":
- 824-849MHz
- 869-894MHz
The law is now useless since all cellphones currently in use in the U.S.A. are now digital, so an analog receiver won't receive them in a useful way.
Cell phones today use:
- CDMA - Verizon, Sprint, US Cellular, MetroPCS
- iDEN - Nextel, Boost, Telus
- GSM - ATT, TMobile
- WCDMA / UMTS - ATT, TMobile
None of these technologies are decodable by an analog scanner, therefore the block is no longer necessary.