• Works with 2G, 3G, 4G, LTE, xLTE, AWS, GSM & CDMA cellular carriers such as Verizon, AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile, Telus, Bell Canada, Rogers, DigiCel and more
  • Also compatible with 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi and 900 MHz radio systems
  • High gain 11 dBi performance increases signal strength and data speeds in areas with marginal coverage
  • Female N connector with 12" pigtail - Outdoor weatherproof enclosure protects antenna elements
  • Includes pole/wall mounting bracket and hardware (mast sold separately)

I live in the country in the middle of the woods. A Verizon tower is 3.8 miles North located through 1/4 mile of dense trees. Cell bars on an iPhone 6 is 2 and voice calls are OK. The cell phone consistantly indicates LTE. I Purchased 2 Proxicast units and connected in a "V" one Plus 45 and the other minus 45 degrees. The antennas are connected using 2 TRENDnet LMR400 N-Type Male to N-Type Female Weatherproof Cable (12M, 39.4ft.) TEW-L412 and 2 OdiySurveil(TM) 1M RF Type-N Male to SMA Male WLAN Antenna Extension Coaxial Cable,39'',RG316 cables. The cables are connected to a Verizon MoFi model T1114. Total antenna investment was $310. During this spring leaf-out service degraded. The same last year. This year we had a lot of rain and internet became more degraded. I did the usual internet research and pieced together this system. For this test the antennas mounted to a pole and mounted to a balcony railing to test out the system before climbing the roof. I didn't see a big difference in the MoFi Data menu RPSP & RPSQ values but the values were usable to navigate directionally the best antenna aim. Here are the (meter.net) test results with and without the antenna connected. Mimo Yagi - Without Ping (ms): 119 - 141 Down (Mbit/s): 14.5 - 1.6 Up (Mbit/s): 5.2 - 3.0 Very satisfied! Background: I gave up on Satellite Internet (Hughesnet) 1.5 years ago. For the roughly same subscription price, I have Verizon 26G (20 Plus 2 gig bonus per phone) shared data for $90.20. At the time Hughesnet Gen4 10G for $59 was unusable for streaming video. The faster offering at the time was $109 for 20G was better but not as fast as Verizon. Satellite's inherent latency (longer ping time) is another consideration. Every satilite ping can take 800 or more milliseconds. Unlimited Verizon data caps hot spots and tethering to 10G so I am better off with a shared data plan for now. The antenna investment is not tied to Verizon and can be used to with other providors should another arangment be more favorable.

I bought two of these antennas to utilize the true MIMO technology of my hotspot. I currently have Sprint as my ISP for my house since I can't get DSL or Cable where I live. If your shopping for antennas to improve your signal make sure whatever "band" you are on to get the correct antenna for the band. I bought these because it covered them all. I am probably going to buy 2 more for my lake house since I can't get a internet provider out there either. I went from 1-3 Mbps Down and .5 up ........to....... 20-25 Mbps Down and 10-15 Mbps Up..... I didn't think this would work as well as it did but I was amazed. If I ever get to purchase two more antennas for my second home I will add a video review to show you the results first hand. PS: I started off with around 1-2 bars inside with some dead spots inside my house. I installed the antenna on the roof and the best location I could find and pointed them to the closest Cell Tower I could find thru OpenSignal software. I ended up with full bars and a happy customer. Thanks Proxicast.

I received my Proxicast Antennas (2x) yesterday. I installed them within 1 hr and had them ready to connect to my Pepwave router. I did an Internet Speed test prior to connecting the cables to my router. I was getting 20MB/Sec (not too bad). I connected the cables (purchased separately) to the Antenna and to the router. Performed another speed test and got 60MB/sec. Like my headline says...well worth the purchase. Thank you so much for an amazing product!

After buying a more expensive and bigger directional yagi from another company, I tried this one because the download speeds were not acceptable. After a side my side comparison, this antenna totally out performed the competitor. My downloads went from 2-3 mb/s with the other antenna, to 5-8 mb/s with this yagi. In no congested hours, I received a high of 40 mb/s which was never obtainable with the ZDA 700mhz antenna.

good signal with this antenna

I married this product up with my recently purchased product of Verizon Cell Phone Booster Mingcoll 700MHz Band 13 Cell Phone Signal Booster Repeater 4G LTE High Gain Mobile Phone Signal Amplifier Repeater Kit for Home (WV70-KZR) and now have outstanding reception. I live in the country with Rollinghills and hard to get a cell signal.

Could not receive strong enough signal from my wi-fi internet provider due to being located in a valley and having a metal roof. Before I added this antenna I was getting from 17 mbps max down to just under 3mbps (under Load) download and upload of 5mbps all the way down to 0.06 mbps. After receiving antenna and a little research I found the spot in the yard to mount antenna and direction of Wi-fi Tower (could not get good signal anywhere on roof.) Now I am able to get from a high of 32.88 mbps download down to (under full load 4 streams) around 4.5 mbps in prime time in early evening.

Does exactly what it says - they promise 11dB, and that's what I'm getting.

In an effort to boost the weak "1-bar" cell site signal that occasionally went to nothing in my rural home's mobile hotspot, I wasted a lot of money on a few different well-rated brands of "packaged" MIMO flat-panel antenna assemblies that hung from a wall or sit on a table - none of which produced any appreciable improvement in signal level (with one unit actually making it weaker yet). Since all of the dual-yagi antenna assemblies I found were horribly expensive, I decided build my own indoor MIMO array using two of these Proxicast 11dB yagi antennas that were stacked (one over the other) on a single, 2'-long piece of 1" PVC electrical conduit that was epoxied into the center hole of a flat/circular 10lb barbell weight to provide a heavy, flat base that would hold the PVC mounting pole in a vertical position. The aluminum mounting bracket on each antenna is easily removed so it can be re-installed (using the many pre-drilled holes) so the antennas can be mounted on any vertical pole in a MIMO configuration (both pointed in the same direction directly toward the nearest cell site with one antenna tilted 45-degrees left from vertical and the other tilted 45-degrees right from vertical) to make use of the greater data-rate capacity that MIMO cell sites can deliver. Placing this rather unsightly indoor antenna array on top of a tall cabinet in my kitchen, pointing the antennas toward the cell site, and routing the antenna pigtails to my mobile hotspot with two pre-constructed, 10'-long, RG-58U coaxial cables (for less signal loss) instantly changed my previously unstable 1-bar signal into a steady 4-bar signal from a cellular tower that's 3 miles away with a number of tall trees in between. Depending on the ambient internet activity and traffic load through the cell site, I'm now getting 14-21mbs download speed and 8-10mbs upload speed in a rural area where I previously had no other choice but to pay $90/month for a pathetic DSL service that barely delivered 1mbs download speed and 450kbs upload speed on its best day. Since it's impossible to receive a signal that doesn't exist, one must first ensure that your hotspot can receive a cell site by itself before considering any type of external antenna. However, if your hotspot can connect with a cell site while "barefoot" (and is equipped with two external MIMO antenna input connectors), you will not be disappointed in any investment you make with a pair of these Proxicast 11dBi yagi antennas and a little "shade tree engineering" and elementary craftsmanship to cobble together your own setup that will be very much worth your money and effort.

Bought this Yagi directional antenna as a backup for when my OTR antenna fails to boost a signal. Took it out to a low signal area that previously required a BGAN Satellite terminal to get cell data. Setup the Yagi and pointed to the nearest cell tower and got Full 4G LTE. Highly recommended.