Country: Usa
My car: 2003 Mercedes ML350
Radio: JY-UO135N4G
Finally got past the SIM not recognized issue. But now I am disappointed with the quality of the antenna. We are using Google FI, which is using TMobile where we are at. Both our Pixel and Pixel 3 have full bar 4G LTE sitting in the car. The radio, with the external antenna ran up and attached to the top of inside of the windshield. Hovers between 1 bar of 4G and 3G.
Is there a better 4G Antenna I can use, is there a recommended installation orientation or location?
Thanks.
Country: Finland
My car: Ford Explorer 2004
Radio: EU-JY-UO135N4G
"bar meters" aren't really very reliable measure of anything and every manufacturer has own ways for displaying values. What really matters is that whether connection works or not.
Country: australia
My car: vw cc 2009
Radio: JY-VO131N4G
Hi I have a JY-VO131N4G and my 4G was completely unusable. It would say 1 or 2 bars but it was too bad to even run a speed test. It did not matter what antenna I used, nothing changed.
I opened up the head unit to investigate and found that they decided to try and save a portion of a cent by directly soldering the antenna jack's fly lead onto the mainboard instead of using the little push in connectors (like the internal ones used on a laptop wifi card).
On the board, there is a trace that goes to a push in antenna jack then next to that is a big solder pad. It does appear however that the pad they soldered to is not connected to anything. meaning the antenna jack you are connecting the 4g antenna to is not actually connected to the 4G chipset.
it looks sort of like this:
-----------------------------------------------------O------------------------------------------[]
(Trace leading from 4G modem) (push in antenna jack) (Solder point antenna is actually connected to)
the left and right side of the O in the diagram are not electrically connected, however, it appears that the design used assumes that it is
google "smd connector wifi" to get an idea of the connector I'm talking about.
anyway, I was able to get mine to work well buy soldering a small jumper wire from the left side of the push in connector to the right side, making the pad they soldered to electrically connected to the modem.
mind you, I did this with a microscope and a micro soldering pencil.
you could probably just order a new fly lead with the push in connector and attach to the connector next to the pad they soldered to.
Country: Deutschland
My car: 1991 Pontiac Firebird
Radio: JY-UO138N4G
I also have the problem. With the Sim card I only receive from time to time. Currently I use a WI-Fi dongle but this means I lack a free USB slot.