You know, Herman, I was looking at my router dashboard the other day, and it felt like I was staring at the flight deck of a Boeing seven forty-seven. There were all these acronyms, negative numbers, and decibel ratings that looked more like a calculus final than a signal meter.
It is a bit of a shock if you are used to just looking at the top of your phone and seeing four bars, isn't it? Most people think those bars are some universal truth, but they are actually a massive marketing abstraction.
Right, and today's prompt from Daniel is about exactly that. He wants us to demystify these GSM and cellular metrics—RSRP, RSRQ, SINR, and the old-school RSSI. Basically, how do you actually read the "health" of your connection when you are setting up a modem or a gateway?
This is such a timely topic because we are in this transition phase. We have the legacy two G and three G networks sunsetting, and five G is becoming the standard, but the way we measure the "strength" of those signals has changed fundamentally over the last decade. By the way, today's episode is powered by Google Gemini three Flash, which is helping us sort through these layers of signal physics.
It is funny you mention the "bars" being a lie. I have had situations where I have full bars on my phone but I can barely load a text-only email, and other times I have one bar but I am streaming four K video without a hiccup. What is actually happening under the hood there?
Well, the "bars" are proprietary. Apple, Samsung, and Google all have different algorithms for what constitutes "four bars." One might decide that negative ninety decibel-milliwatts is full strength, while another thinks that is only three bars. But more importantly, bars usually only measure power, not quality. It is like being in a room with a very loud person who is shouting in a language you don't understand. The volume is high—that is your signal strength—but the information transfer is zero because the quality is terrible.
So we need to move past the volume and look at the clarity. Daniel mentioned these four big ones. Let's start with the one that most people see first but probably understand the least: RSRP. That stands for Reference Signal Received Power, right?
That is it. If you are on an LTE or five G network, RSRP is your new best friend. It replaced the old RSSI metric as the primary way we measure how much "useful" signal is reaching your antenna.
Why "reference" signal? Why isn't it just "signal power"?
Because in a modern digital network, the tower is blasting out all sorts of data to hundreds of different users at once. If you just measured the total power, you would be measuring everyone else's data too. RSRP specifically looks at the power of the "pilot" or "reference" signals that the tower sends out just for synchronization. It is a clean, narrow measurement of the tower's "voice" specifically, ignoring the "noise" of the data traffic.
And this is measured in dBm, or decibel-milliwatts. I always find it counter-intuitive that these are negative numbers. Can you walk us through the scale? Because to a layman, negative eighty sounds worse than negative seventy, but in signal land, it is the opposite.
Think of it as how far you are below one milliwatt of power. Zero dBm is exactly one milliwatt. Since cellular signals are incredibly faint by the time they hit your house, they are always fractions of a milliwatt. Negative seventy dBm is actually a very strong signal. It is excellent. If you are seeing negative eighty to negative ninety, you are in the "good" range. Once you hit negative one hundred, you are starting to lose stability. And if you see negative one hundred and twenty? You are basically holding a brick.
What I find wild is the logarithmic nature of this. You mentioned that a three decibel change is a doubling or halving of power. So, the difference between negative eighty and negative seventy isn't just "ten units" better—it is actually ten times the power.
Well, not exactly—I mean, you've hit the nail on the head. Every three decibels is a factor of two. So ten decibels is a factor of ten. If you move your antenna and your RSRP goes from negative ninety to negative eighty, you haven't just made a small adjustment; you have increased the usable power hitting your modem by ten times. That is why small movements in antenna placement can have such a massive impact on your connection stability.
But here is the catch, and I think this is where people get frustrated. I have seen setups with a "great" RSRP of negative seventy-five, which should be rock solid, but the speeds are still pathetic. That brings us to the second metric: RSRQ, or Reference Signal Received Quality.
This is where the "loud room" analogy really pays off. RSRQ is a ratio. It is looking at the RSRP—that useful pilot signal—and comparing it to the total power being received, including all the interference and noise. It tells us how "clean" that signal is.
So if RSRP is the volume of the person speaking to you, RSRQ is how much other people in the room are talking at the same time?
Pretty much. If you have a strong RSRP but a terrible RSRQ, it means your modem is hearing the tower loudly, but it is also hearing a lot of other "junk." That junk could be interference from another cell tower on the same frequency, or it could be electronic noise from a microwave or a poorly shielded power supply in your house.
What does the scale look like for RSRQ? These are also negative, but the numbers are much smaller, right?
Right. We are looking at a much tighter range. Usually, negative six to negative ten decibels is considered excellent. If you are seeing negative fifteen to negative twenty, you are in trouble. At negative twenty, your modem is struggling to tell the difference between a data packet and background static. This is when you see "latency spikes" or "jitter." Your download might start fast, then stall, then jump again. That is the modem constantly asking the tower to "repeat that last sentence" because the quality was too low to decode it.
I had a buddy who lived in a rural area, and he spent a fortune on a high-gain directional antenna. He pointed it right at the tower and got his RSRP up to negative eighty, which he thought was a win. But his speeds didn't improve. It turned out that because he was using a cheap, unshielded cable, he was picking up so much interference that his RSRQ was bottoming out at negative eighteen. He had "volume" but no "clarity."
That is a classic mistake. People think "more power equals more speed," but in the digital world, "cleaner signal equals more speed." That brings us to the king of all metrics, the one that truly dictates how fast your internet is going to be: SINR. Signal-to-Interference-plus-Noise Ratio.
This is the one that is usually a positive number, right? Whenever I see a high positive number on SINR, I know I am in for a good time.
SINR is the raw math of your link quality. It is basically the "SNR" or Signal-to-Noise Ratio, but it explicitly includes "Interference" from other towers. If your SINR is above twenty decibels, you are in the gold medal territory. That means the signal you want is one hundred times stronger than all the noise and interference combined.
And this is what actually determines the MCS, the Modulation and Coding Scheme? I know we have talked about this before, but that is the "gear" the modem shifts into, right?
That is a great way to put it. The modem and the tower are constantly negotiating. If the SINR is high, they say, "Hey, the line is perfectly clear, let's use two hundred and fifty-six QAM." That is a very complex way of packing bits into a signal. It is like writing in very small, precise cursive. You can fit a lot of words on the page. But if the SINR drops to five decibels, the line is "noisy." They have to switch to Q-P-S-K or sixteen QAM, which is like writing with a thick sharpie in block letters. You can only fit a few words on the page, so your speed drops, even if the "signal strength" is still high.
So, if I am trying to optimize my home office setup for a cellular gateway, I should be looking at SINR more than anything else?
If you have to pick one number to obsess over, it is SINR. You can have a "weak" RSRP of negative ninety-five—which looks bad on a bar chart—but if your SINR is twenty-five decibels, you will likely have a faster and more stable connection than someone with a "strong" RSRP of negative seventy and a SINR of three.
That is such a counter-intuitive point for most people. We are trained to want "more signal," but what we actually want is "less noise."
It is the difference between a whisper in a silent library and a shout in a rock concert. You can hear the whisper perfectly because there is no noise. That is a low RSRP but a high SINR. You can't hear the shout at the concert because of the noise. That is a high RSRP but a low SINR.
We should probably touch on RSSI briefly, even though it is a bit of a legacy metric. I still see it in a lot of older modem interfaces or "signal finders." Received Signal Strength Indicator. Why is this becoming less relevant?
RSSI is a "dumb" metric. It just measures the total wideband power received. Back in the two G and three G days, that was mostly fine. But in LTE and five G, where we use Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing—O-F-D-M—the signal is spread out over many sub-carriers. RSSI doesn't know the difference between your tower's signal, a neighboring tower's signal, or the electromagnetic interference from your neighbor's old plasma TV.
So if I am looking at an RSSI of negative fifty, which sounds "perfect," it might actually be a disaster because it is measuring a lot of "garbage" power?
Precisely. If you see RSSI in a modern tool, it is often just there for backward compatibility or as a very rough "is the antenna plugged in" check. For actual performance tuning, you ignore RSSI and look at RSRP and SINR.
Let's talk about the practical side of this. Say someone is setting up a Starlink-alternative cellular backup, or maybe they are a digital nomad using a five G travel rig. They get their modem out, they look at the dashboard, and they see these numbers. What is the "Golden Rule" or the hierarchy of how to treat these?
The hierarchy I always recommend is: SINR first, then RSRQ, then RSRP.
SINR is king.
Always. If you are moving your antenna around, you want to find the spot that maximizes SINR. Sometimes that means pointing the antenna slightly away from the tower to put a building or a hill between you and a different tower that is causing interference. You might lose some RSRP—your signal strength might drop—but your SINR will go up because you blocked the "noise" from the other tower.
That is a pro tip right there. "Point it away to get better signal." It sounds like madness, but it is all about the ratio.
It really is. And the second step is looking at RSRQ to check for congestion. If your SINR is okay but your RSRQ is dancing around wildly, that often indicates that the tower itself is overloaded. It is sending out a lot of data to other people, which creates "self-interference." If you see that, you might want to try "band locking."
Band locking—that is where you tell the modem to ignore, say, the crowded two point one gigahertz band and stick to the six hundred megahertz band even if it is "slower" theoretically?
A "slower" frequency band with less congestion will almost always give you a better real-world experience than a "fast" band that is at one hundred percent capacity. You can use these metrics to see that. If you switch bands and your SINR jumps from three to fifteen, you have found your winner, regardless of what the "bars" say.
I also want to talk about upload versus download. This is a common frustration Daniel mentioned in the notes. People get great download speeds, but their Zoom calls are dropping because the upload is non-existent. How do these metrics explain that?
This is the "Big Ear, Small Mouth" problem. Your cellular gateway usually has a much larger antenna and more processing power than the tower's receiver has for you. Or rather, the tower is blasting out hundreds of watts of power, while your little modem is only allowed to broadcast at a fraction of a watt.
So the modem can "hear" the tower perfectly—high RSRP—but the tower can't "hear" the modem?
Your dashboard's RSRP is measuring what the modem is hearing. It doesn't tell you how well the tower is hearing you. If you have a great RSRP but terrible upload, it means your "mouth" isn't loud enough. This is where you need a better "uplink" antenna—usually a directional one—to focus your modem's tiny voice right at the tower.
It is like trying to have a conversation across a canyon. You can hear the guy with the megaphone on the other side just fine, but unless you have a megaphone of your own, he isn't going to hear a word you say.
And you can actually diagnose this by looking at the "Transmit Power" metric if your modem shows it. If your modem is constantly at "max transmit power"—usually around twenty-three dBm—but your speeds are low, it means it is "shouting" as loud as it can and still not being heard.
This brings up an interesting point about five G "Standalone" versus "Non-Standalone." We are seeing a lot of "fake" five G where the phone shows a five G icon but it is actually using an LTE anchor for the control signals. How do the metrics change there?
Oh, that is a mess for most users. In Non-Standalone—N-S-A—your device is actually connected to two different radios at once. You will have an LTE RSRP and a five G RSRP. Often, your "slow five G" is actually caused by a congested LTE anchor. If you have a modem that lets you see both, you might notice that your LTE SINR is terrible, which is dragging down the whole connection, even if the five G signal is pristine.
So the "five G" is only as good as the four G it is piggybacking on.
In N-S-A mode, yes. That is why everyone is excited about five G Standalone—S-A—where it is five G all the way through. The metrics become much cleaner because you are only looking at one set of numbers for one radio technology.
Let's talk about tools for a second. If someone is listening to this and they want to go beyond the "basic" web interface of their T-Mobile or Verizon home internet box, what should they be looking for? I know you mentioned AT commands earlier.
If you are a real nerd about this, you want a modem that gives you access to the "AT Command" interface. Commands like "A-T exclamation mark G-STATUS" on Sierra Wireless modems, or similar commands on Quectel modules, will give you a raw dump of every sub-carrier, every band, and the exact RSRP and SINR for each one.
For the less "terminal-inclined," there are apps like LTE H-Monitor for Windows or various signal-testing apps for Android that can pull this data via the modem's API.
Right. And if you are on an iPhone, you can use the "Field Test Mode" by dialing "star three thousand one# one two three four five # star" in the phone app. It is a hidden menu that shows you the raw RSRP and SINR of the tower you are currently connected to. It is much more useful than the bars when you are trying to find the "sweet spot" in your house for a router.
I've used that Field Test Mode before. It is fascinating to walk around the house and see the RSRP jump by ten points just by moving three feet away from a window. It really drives home how much the physical environment affects these high-frequency waves.
It is also a great way to "bust" the myth of the "best window." People always assume the window is the best place for a modem. But modern "low-E" glass—the energy-efficient stuff—often has a thin metallic film that acts like a shield. I have seen cases where the signal is actually better through a wood-frame wall than through a modern energy-efficient window.
No way. So you are saying the "insulation" on the window is basically a Faraday cage?
In some cases, yes! If you are looking at your RSRP and it is negative ninety-five at the window but negative eighty-five against the wall, you have just discovered that your windows are "signal killers." You would never know that without looking at the raw metrics.
That is a perfect example of why this matters. It turns a "guessing game" into an engineering task. You aren't just waving a magic wand around; you are optimizing for specific, measurable outcomes.
And it empowers you when talking to your provider. If you call tech support and say "my internet is slow," they will give you the "turn it off and on again" script. But if you say, "My RSRP is negative eighty, but my SINR is fluctuating between negative two and positive three, suggesting significant external interference on band sixty-six," you might actually get escalated to an engineer who can check if a nearby tower has a faulty sector.
"I am not just a customer, I am a network analyst now." I love it. So, let's recap the "cheat sheet" for our listeners. If they are looking at their dashboard right now: RSRP is strength, and you want it closer to zero—ideally better than negative ninety. RSRQ is quality, and you want it better than negative twelve. SINR is the "cleanliness" or speed potential, and you want it as high as possible—ideally above ten or fifteen.
And ignore RSSI if you can. It is the "grandfather clock" of metrics—charming, but not how we keep time in the twenty-first century.
What about the future? As we move into higher frequency bands—like Millimeter Wave—do these metrics stay the same? Or does the physics of those tiny waves require a whole new set of acronyms?
The core metrics like RSRP and SINR will stay, but they become much more volatile. With Millimeter Wave, your RSRP can go from negative seventy to "disconnected" just because a truck drove between you and the tower. We might see more metrics focused on "beamforming" quality—basically, how well the tower is "aiming" its signal at you—but for the average home user, the "Big Three" of RSRP, RSRQ, and SINR will remain the gold standard for a long time.
It is amazing how much complexity is hidden behind that little "five G" icon on our phones. It is a massive, real-time orchestration of physics and math happening every millisecond.
It really is. And once you understand the math, the "magic" of cellular internet becomes a tool you can actually master. It is the difference between being a passenger and being the driver.
Well, I feel a lot less intimidated by my router dashboard now. I might even go and move it away from that "low-E" window and see if I can't squeeze another five decibels of SINR out of it.
Just remember: small moves, Corn. Small moves. A few inches can be the difference between a doubling of power and a total blackout.
I'll keep the "logarithmic rule" in mind. This has been a great deep dive. Thanks as always to our producer Hilbert Flumingtop for keeping the "signal" of this show clean and the "noise" low.
And a big thanks to Modal for providing the GPU credits that power the generation of this show. They are the "high SINR" of the cloud computing world—pure performance, no clutter.
This has been My Weird Prompts. If you want to see the charts and the "cheat sheet" we talked about today, check out the show notes or find us at myweirdprompts dot com.
We are also on Telegram—just search for My Weird Prompts to get notified whenever we drop a new episode into your "feed."
Catch you in the next one, Herman.
See ya, Corn.