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Using a satellite phone for remote areas

Started by pabst79, March 19, 2017, 08:16:32 PM

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pabst79

I'm looking for information and or advice for those of you that work and travel in remote areas of the World, what works best for a Satellite phone ? We travel to an area in Ontario every year that is completely off the grid, and travel to Manitoba sometimes with the same issue. We rented a sat phone a couple years ago, it cost us 400.00 for the week and its performance was spotty at best. We will be up there again in June for 10 days and I will have work things that will have to be checked daily. Is a satellite phone the only option? Maybe some sort of paid app or program? I remember seeing another guy a few years ago standing on the dock with his laptop and a bluetooth headset on, I never asked what he was doing, didn't want to be nosy.
Not sure which came first, but I have chickens and eggs.

Gearbox

A Spot Beacon works off satellite you can be tracked or push the button to be rescued . A lot of motorcycle adventure riders use them .
A bunch of chainsaws a BT6870 processer , TC 5 International track skidder and not near enough time

pabst79

I had never heard of the spot device, pretty neat, if I could receive a message back it would work good. I see they have Sat phones too, but at 410.00 for the phone and a 12 month contract (40.00 per month), it looks like I'll be renting one again.  smiley_headscratch
Not sure which came first, but I have chickens and eggs.

coxy

don't know how the new ones are but about 10years ago the fish police had them and they where junk

sawguy21

We used them in the late 90's, they were the only option in the remote area we worked. Met our needs reasonably well but the delay took getting used to. Air time was DanG expensive so the crews were asked to use discretion.  Technology has likely improved.
old age and treachery will always overcome youth and enthusiasm

OntarioAl

I work with Sat phones in North Western Ontario.
They work but be prepared for dropped calls.
getting a satellite lock can sometimes drive you nuts
A helpful hint in acquiring a satellite is try to have as much as possible an unobstructed view of the southern horizon open areas lakes etc.
There is cell coverage but it is limited to the trans Canada highway corridor, establish communities and some of the First nations are  also wired (Bell, Rodgers)
Have a nice vacation
Al 
Al Raman

gspren

  My brother recently got a Garmin Inreach device that combines GPS and texting capabilities. From what I remember him telling me he has a few short texts such as "I'm OK" that he can send without going against his count, he is only allowed a few texts before charges start but the basic is only a little over $10 a month. Our hunting camp has no cell coverage so he got this for safety as it will work in an emergency. It has an "SOS" button.
Stihl 041, 044 & 261, Kubota 400 RTV, Kubota BX 2670, Ferris Zero turn

Ianab

Not cheap, but likely the guy the OP saw was using something like this.

http://www.groundcontrol.com/IsatHub.htm

Combination satellite link and wifi access point. Then connect your laptop / tablet etc to the wifi hotspot.
Weekend warrior, Peterson JP test pilot, Dolmar 7900 and Stihl MS310 saws and  the usual collection of power tools :)

starmac

I have an iridiniam or at least I think that is how it is spelled. I think I paid in the 12 hundred dollar neighborhood and 200 every 6 months for something like 200 minutes. I keep it in the truck at all times and it may not be the best, but has always worked when I needed it. It will drop some calls, and I only turn it on when I really need it, I doubt if I have ever had over 20 minutes on it in a 6 month period, surely not over 60 minutes.
Old LT40HD, old log truck, old MM forklift, and several huskies.

pabst79

I was looking at the irdidium and others, can get one used for 400-600, with a return guarantee. I also found that you can buy cards with a chip, with a certain amount of minutes attached, if the cards don't expire it might be a better option then renting every year. Technology is great, just DanG expensive sometimes...
Not sure which came first, but I have chickens and eggs.

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