Long Distance Line of Sight Cordless Phone recommendations"

   / Long Distance Line of Sight Cordless Phone recommendations"
  • Thread Starter
#11  
He has Comcast for everything... and Verizon for a family cell plan because Verizon is the only provider with a signal out on the farm.

He had Comcast come out to extend the line to the barn used for the Christmas Tree operation and was told it was not possible... so he said he wanted to have Comcast do a second install for the barn/farm shop and was told no possible...

Wasted a lot of time on this... plus had a supervisor come out who also said NO...

They all use Cell Phones and the Comcast Phone is part of their package and uses the same phone number the farm always had...

As mentioned... the previous owners had a number that rang at two separate locations... both the house and the barn with the connection made at the Telco Central Office... no stringing 2,000 feet of wire or more... just came down from the utility pole down the road.

If you answered the phone in the barn it was the same as answering it in the house.

The Barn is on the same 65 acre property but has it's own separate Electric Meter... with AG rates.

I would like to understand the phone issue because it seems it should be simple.
 
   / Long Distance Line of Sight Cordless Phone recommendations" #12  
He has Comcast for everything... and Verizon for a family cell plan because Verizon is the only provider with a signal out on the farm.

He had Comcast come out to extend the line to the barn used for the Christmas Tree operation and was told it was not possible... so he said he wanted to have Comcast do a second install for the barn/farm shop and was told no possible...

Wasted a lot of time on this... plus had a supervisor come out who also said NO...

They all use Cell Phones and the Comcast Phone is part of their package and uses the same phone number the farm always had...

As mentioned... the previous owners had a number that rang at two separate locations... both the house and the barn with the connection made at the Telco Central Office... no stringing 2,000 feet of wire or more... just came down from the utility pole down the road.

If you answered the phone in the barn it was the same as answering it in the house.

The Barn is on the same 65 acre property but has it's own separate Electric Meter... with AG rates.

I would like to understand the phone issue because it seems it should be simple.

Dual or bridged service should be easy.. Perhaps we don't understand something. Is there any internet service in the barn area?
 
   / Long Distance Line of Sight Cordless Phone recommendations"
  • Thread Starter
#13  
Not from him... he has a neighbor that has allowed Internet Access to use a tablet to ring up sales...

The neighbor's WiFi is surprisingly good... but not the WiFi from the my brother's home.

The main thing was to have a working phone in the barn so the Christmas Tree calls could be answered real time instead of spending a couple of hours each night returning calls...

One day there were 57 new messages and most just wanted to make sure a certain type/size tree was available should they decide to make the drive out.

I still don't know why he doesn't want to forward to his Verizon Cell... but I do know with teenagers they go through a tremendous amount of Data each month...
 
   / Long Distance Line of Sight Cordless Phone recommendations" #14  
As mentioned... the previous owners had a number that rang at two separate locations... both the house and the barn with the connection made at the Telco Central Office... no stringing 2,000 feet of wire or more... just came down from the utility pole down the road.

If you answered the phone in the barn it was the same as answering it in the house.

The Barn is on the same 65 acre property but has it's own separate Electric Meter... with AG rates.

I would like to understand the phone issue because it seems it should be simple.

IN THE OLD DAYS - There WAS 2000 feet of cable between the 2 locations. The telco just tapped off the same pair of wires that ran past both locations to provide the phone service.

NOW - it sounds like Comcast is providing service via a coax cable to the home location. A "phone number" travels on the coax as data that is then decoded at the equipment at the house. In simple terms you cannot have the same "phone" data decoded at 2 different locations.

The old telco copper is still probably in place. Maybe someone could bridge the service from the Comcast jack and backfeed it to the old telco connection at the house. Maybe the phone at the barn just might ring.
 
   / Long Distance Line of Sight Cordless Phone recommendations" #15  
i would do this with a pair of the ubiquity nanostation local M5 units (this is a wifi "bridge" you just plug your ethernet connected voip phone box to the one in the field and you plug the other one into the wired network in the house). You *might* be able to get away with having just one (they have directional antennas so you want to aim them at each other).

These will bring full ethernet out to the remote location at 20-50Mb/second depending on how far you are away. They work well and i've tested them in pairs out to about a half mile with not issues. (should work further than that).

You can also use them just individually (put one int he field and set it up to be a client of your wifi network, since they have higher power/better antennas they often work further than a device will).

You'd need to use a voip phone with these but those are pretty cheap these days.
 
   / Long Distance Line of Sight Cordless Phone recommendations"
  • Thread Starter
#16  
Lots of good suggestions...

I'm intrigued by the chance there could still be a pair running from the barn to the house out along the poles...

It is something I will need to check... and embarrassed to say I have never plugged in an analog phone into any of the ATT Jacks...

The VOIP sounds interest too...

A couple of years ago he stated walking and did the "Can you hear me now" as he headed toward the barn... didn't get very far before the signal started to fade.
 
   / Long Distance Line of Sight Cordless Phone recommendations" #17  
The VOIP sounds interest too...

VoIP is what Comcast is providing. As Earplug noted above, Comcast is delivering that to the house, and there it is. They don't want to spend the money to run something to your barn - that's your problem.

Since he has the Comcast Internet to his home, he can get VoIP service from hundreds of different companies - it's all over his Internet connection. But any other company will leave him in the same boat - no phone service without Internet.
 
   / Long Distance Line of Sight Cordless Phone recommendations" #18  
VoIP is what Comcast is providing. As Earplug noted above, Comcast is delivering that to the house, and there it is. They don't want to spend the money to run something to your barn - that's your problem.

Since he has the Comcast Internet to his home, he can get VoIP service from hundreds of different companies - it's all over his Internet connection. But any other company will leave him in the same boat - no phone service without Internet.
right. You could in theory, take the comcast VOIP box (if it separate from the cablemodem itself) and just move it to the outbuilding if you did the ubiquity wifi bridge thing and it wouldn't know the difference, it'll look like its on the house network.

I use a vonage VOIP line which is its own little box rather than the comcast VOIP service and so you can move that around to different locations as long as there's a path to the internet from wherever you plug it in.

The ubiquiti stuff comes in a 2.4ghz and a 5ghz flavor (the 2.4 flavor will generally work over longer distances unless yo have a lot of 2.4 networks (or microwave ovens) around. The 5ghz one is more resistant to interference because many fewer people use 5ghz. the "local" version of the ubquiti stuff is lower power than the "non-local" version (but the local might be enough for your application).
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

2017 Rogator RG1300B Dry Fertilizer Applicator (A55302)
2017 Rogator...
PALLET OF SCAFFOLDING (APPROX. 12 PC) (A52706)
PALLET OF...
2010 Ford Edge SE SUV (A51694)
2010 Ford Edge SE...
2007 Godwin Pumps GHP45KW-RC 45kW Towable Diesel Generator (A53421)
2007 Godwin Pumps...
2017 E-Z Beever M12R Towable Brush Chipper (A50322)
2017 E-Z Beever...
2021 Caterpillar 428 4x4 Extendahoe Loader Backhoe (A52377)
2021 Caterpillar...
 
Top