What Causes Cell Phones to Disrupt During Power Surges?

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A brief power outage caused a cell phone disruption during a call, leading to speculation about the cause. One theory suggests that a high voltage spike could have transmitted through the environment and affected the phone, especially if it was charging. Another possibility is that an electromagnetic spike overloaded the phone's automatic gain control, although such systems typically recover quickly. The proximity of a power pole and cell tower may have contributed to the issue, as the outage could have impacted the signal. Overall, the incident highlights potential vulnerabilities in cell phone technology during power fluctuations.
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Pacing in my office this afternoon, talking with my dear old mother on my cell phone; I happened to observe a brief power outage. A bump, or surge, if you will. It was a loud buzz (no transformer around me that I know of), lights went out, and strangely enough it knocked out my cell phone. I couldn't get a signal on it until I reset the phone...

Now what on Earth could have caused this? Everything came right back on afterwards, and all is back to normal, but I have never heard of cell phone interference from a power outage before.
 
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It's hard to say without knowing more variables that could have accounted for the cell phone disruption under the circumstance.

One possibility is a transition of a high voltage spike being transmitted to the surroundings, and then through your body to the cell phone. If the phone was plugged into a charger then chance of that would be greater.

Another possibility is that an EM spike could have overloaded the AGC (automatic gain control) low noise amplifier in the cell phone. But such an AGC should recover quickly from any EM transients. So perhaps it's just poor shielding in the cell phone.

I used to have a cell phone that would occasionally freeze once in a while. Had to reboot it every time it froze.
 
waht said:
One possibility is a transition of a high voltage spike being transmitted to the surroundings, and then through your body to the cell phone. If the phone was plugged into a charger then chance of that would be greater.

No, it wasn't plugged in when I was talking on it. And that's really a creepy thought, having a voltage spike surging through my body.

waht said:
I used to have a cell phone that would occasionally freeze once in a while. Had to reboot it every time it froze.

First time I've ever had to restart this phone. Only had it for a few months though. Plus the fact that all the lights went out at the same time.

I haven't checked yet, but I believe there may be a transformer on a power pole just a few yards away from my office wall. (I'm on the second floor) I am thinking that could have blown... But not sure yet.

Edit: Nope, no transformer, but as I suspected there is a power pole maybe 5 yards away from the wall I share.
 
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The power spike could have affected the nearby cell phone tower that you were connected to. How far away is the nearest tower? I can see the nearest tower from my office window...
 
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