• ℍ𝕂-𝟞𝟝
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    1 month ago

    4G is on a different frequency, it’s out of the audible range.

    The reason you used to hear it is that a speaker turns electromagnetic vibration, so the back and forth movement of electrons into mechanical vibration, so the back and forth movement of sound.

    2G was on a frequency that you could hear, so when the wires in your speakers picked it up like an antenna, your speakers played it back. 4G is much higher pitched, so it’s still there, it’s just so high you can’t hear it anymore.

    Edit: Read Milkyway’s comment, they sound like they know more about this than I do. It’s not the frequency but the amplitude.

    • @[email protected]
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      141 month ago

      No, the frequency isn’t necessarily all that different. Some 4G Bands are even below typical 2G/GSM Bands. The major difference is how the multiple access and Modulation is done. 2G uses short, narrowband, high power bursts. It’s the interval of these bursts that causes the interference, not the carrier frequency.