Cell Phone - Calls Dropped Or Cut Off
Date: March 20, 2009
Order No.: S-B-82.70/475a
Supersedes: P-B-82.70/475 dated Nov. 14, 2005
Group: 82
Revision History
Revision Date Purpose
a 3/20/09 Applicable Models Updated
2000 Mercedes Benz Truck ML 55 AMG (163.174) V8-5.5L (113.981) 379
- 11/14/05 Initial issue
SUBJECT:
All Passenger Car and Light Truck Models
Telephone Calls Being Cut Off or Dropped
If you receive customer reports in the above model vehicles for telephone calls being dropped or disconnected even with adequate signal strength,
please read the below information on possible causes.
1. Dead Zones - Depending on the location and the respective network provider, 100% network coverage may not be present. Network coverage can
vary at the same location depending on the network provider. When crossing from an area with network coverage to an area without network
coverage, reception may drop to zero and the call may be cut off, even though the phone or head unit may still continue to show signal strength.
There are many things that can diminish "dead zones" and weather is a large contributor.
2. Switching Cells - While driving, the telephone transfers from network cell to the next network cell. Sometimes switching between cellular towers
can also cause calls to be dropped. This can be fixed by the customer's service provider (Verizon, Sprint, Alltel, Cingular, T-Mobile, etc.). If
customers experience dropped calls on a regular basis along the same route, they should take note of the cross streets or address and contact their
service provider and describe where the drops are taking place and time of day.
3. Cells Operating at Full Capacity - While driving, the telephone transfers from network cell to the next network cell. Each cell can only process a
maximum number of calls. If the vehicle with an active call transfers to a cell operating at full capacity, the cell cannot handle the call and it will be
dropped. The call is cut off even though the head unit and/or telephone may be showing full signal strength and anywhere from 1 to 5 bars.
These are network problems and not related to the vehicle; replacing components will NOT resolve the complaint.
Date: March 20, 2009
Order No.: S-B-82.70/475a
Supersedes: P-B-82.70/475 dated Nov. 14, 2005
Group: 82
Revision History
Revision Date Purpose
a 3/20/09 Applicable Models Updated
2000 Mercedes Benz Truck ML 55 AMG (163.174) V8-5.5L (113.981) 379
- 11/14/05 Initial issue
SUBJECT:
All Passenger Car and Light Truck Models
Telephone Calls Being Cut Off or Dropped
If you receive customer reports in the above model vehicles for telephone calls being dropped or disconnected even with adequate signal strength,
please read the below information on possible causes.
1. Dead Zones - Depending on the location and the respective network provider, 100% network coverage may not be present. Network coverage can
vary at the same location depending on the network provider. When crossing from an area with network coverage to an area without network
coverage, reception may drop to zero and the call may be cut off, even though the phone or head unit may still continue to show signal strength.
There are many things that can diminish "dead zones" and weather is a large contributor.
2. Switching Cells - While driving, the telephone transfers from network cell to the next network cell. Sometimes switching between cellular towers
can also cause calls to be dropped. This can be fixed by the customer's service provider (Verizon, Sprint, Alltel, Cingular, T-Mobile, etc.). If
customers experience dropped calls on a regular basis along the same route, they should take note of the cross streets or address and contact their
service provider and describe where the drops are taking place and time of day.
3. Cells Operating at Full Capacity - While driving, the telephone transfers from network cell to the next network cell. Each cell can only process a
maximum number of calls. If the vehicle with an active call transfers to a cell operating at full capacity, the cell cannot handle the call and it will be
dropped. The call is cut off even though the head unit and/or telephone may be showing full signal strength and anywhere from 1 to 5 bars.
These are network problems and not related to the vehicle; replacing components will NOT resolve the complaint.
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