treehouse said:
So individual cell phones transmitters and receivers can transmit and receive only on a much narrower range of frequencies than a tower?
For GSM and UMTS-FDD they use different frequencies for up- and down-link, but radio electronics may still be easily retuned. For UMTS-TDD (rarely used, but implemented by phones) they use the same frequency. So that is not a problem.
Problem is that the protocols are asymmetric (e.g. most control functions, like assigning timeslots for transmission are performed only by BS). So you could use only the very lowest layers of communication: radio electronics and modulators, but the transmission control, coding, encrypting, transmission power adjustment, error detection/correction, etc - would have to be implemented by you.
treehouse said:
Sure, you may use shortwave (except of antenna size rather unconvenient for handheld phone) or any other unrestricted band, like for CB. But what this have in common with cellphone? You don't use its radio part nor its cellular protocol part. OK... you still may use its case, battery, speaker, microphone and keyboard... But I would rather buy CB than build it myself basing on cell-phone.
I missed that your question:
treehouse said:
at a range comparable to the range they can communicate with towers?
No - for two reasons: base stations use hi-gain directional (usually sectors are 60°) antennas and advanced noise reduction systems, while handsets use simple single omnidirectional antennas. Two: power transmitted by BS is much higher than by handset.
Max distance for handset-handset communication for TETRA in open area is 3-5km, while handset-BS is up to 25-40km (anyway BS grid is usually below 20km even in wilderness, much more dense in urban areas)