on 02-03-2017 15:55
on 02-03-2017 15:55
I want to ask O2 about legal signal boosters that I can install in a property with a very poor signal from the nearest mast (which is O2).
However I can't seem to find any way to contact O2 without already having an account number or a phone number with them. Even live chat won't let me in unless I give them an O2 phone number.
The whole point is I don't yet have a number with O2 as the property doesn't have a phone line and organisation that owns the property isn't yet with O2.
Anyone know how to do it?
Or are they delibererately stopping new customers joining them?
on 02-03-2017 17:22
on 02-03-2017 17:22
@Anonymous
If you can give the full requirement we may be able to help but from the comments already posted you may struggle
on 02-03-2017 17:27
on 02-03-2017 17:27
on 02-03-2017 19:31
@adamtemp64and @MI5
Probably better if I give the situation as the situation dictates the requirements.
A bungalow inside a remote bit of National Trust land in the mountains of North Wales.
Owned by my mountaineering association with about 600 members and used as a climbing club hut. Legally the association is a ‘Mutual Society’ but I don’t know if that is classed as a business by O2.
The hut is used by all members at random and is pretty much fully occupied every weekend and holidays and at odd times in between.
Never had a fixed line phone and, even if we got planning permission it would cost over $60k to install one. Can just about get a very faint signal from an O2 mast some distance away (sometimes 1 bar, most times no bars)
Concerned that members there cannot contact anyone in the event of an accident, either due to working there alone or a climbing accident.
Hence would like some sort of phone out/in ability. Internet would be nice for the odd weather forecast etc but not essential.
Stand alone satellite phone too expensive to leave in a building that might be unoccupied and it could get lost if taken outside.
Satellite broadband is just about a possibility (too many mountains in the way for line of sight) but it’s a bit of an overkill to pay £25 a month for 10 Gb data download just to get VOIP so we can make phone calls – that we might often have to pay more for as they will often be to fixed lines.
Hence now investigating legal ways to boost the mobile signal we already have so it is usable by anyone with their own mobile phone, and with them paying their own bill.
on 02-03-2017 19:42
on 02-03-2017 19:42
on 02-03-2017 19:47
on 02-03-2017 19:47
@Anonymous
Ok Now we understand the situation fully .
With o2 or any other network your options are nil for a booster or new cell. (unless o2 launch some specific product)
These remote situations may require a think out of the box solution like a point to piont wfif providing voip via solar power etc at remote location over a large distance to the building directional antenna or other legal forms of 2 way radio for emergency contact etc.
on 03-03-2017 07:14
on 03-03-2017 07:14
Please note, this is not customer services and we cannot access your account. Do not publish personal details (email, phone number, bank account).
Link to our guide on how to contact them can be found here
on 03-03-2017 09:38
on 03-03-2017 16:47
on 03-03-2017 16:47
only o2 customerservice can advise you further..
I do not know of a device you ,mention.
A mobie phone designed for a car instalation with an external corded handpiece and a 12 v supply and external antenna should work but then connecting to a payphone would not work .
on 05-03-2017 11:10
on 05-03-2017 11:10
After some digging etc
look up Huawei B315 it is a 4g router (also 2g and 3g) that has an external Telephone socket for connecting a normal phone you need to insert a voice and data sim . (But may breach o2 T&C for voice and data sims) and 2 external antenna sockets sma to connect to an external mimo antenna wide band i.e. 2g 3g 4g pointing at the o2 mast
on 05-03-2017 15:30