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SureCall Fusion4Home Cell Phone Signal Booster up to 3000 sq ft, Boosts 5G/4G LTE, Yagi Outdoor Antenna, Home & Office Multi-User All Carrier, Verizon AT&T Sprint T-Mobile, FCC Approved, USA Company

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Availability: Only 9 left in stock, order soon!
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Arrives Friday, Jul 18
Order within 16 hours and 33 minutes
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Color: Fusion4Home Yagi/Whip


Features

  • Product Features: The Sure Call Fusion4Home Yagi/Whip boosts weak signal in areas up to 3, 000 sq. ft. This results in fewer dropped calls, improved battery life, higher audio quality, and faster data and streaming. Sure call cell phone signal boosters are compatible with all North American carriers including: AT&T, T-Mobile, Verizon, Sprint, Straight Talk, U. S. Cellular and many more. FCC approved.
  • Best For: The Sure Call Fusion4Home Yagi/Whip is the most powerful cell phone signal booster for medium sized homes in rural and suburban areas. Indoor coverage area will vary based on available outdoor signal strength: 1-2 bars ~1, 000 sq. Ft, 3-4 bars ~2, 000 sq. Ft, 5 bars ~3, 000 sq. Ft.
  • Future Proof: The SureCall Fusion4Home Yagi/Whip is compatible with all 5G phones. It will boost voice and 4G LTE data signals on 5G phones and devices.
  • Easy Installation: one of the easiest 4G signal boosters to install on the market. Simply set up the outdoor yagi-directional antenna, run the coax cable into your home, and place the cellular amplifier (base unit) where you want. Finally, attached the whip antenna to the amplifier.
  • Built to Last: Featureing SureCall's 2XP technology, the Fusion4Home Yagi/Whip is built with the highest quality materials for reliable connectivity when you need it most! Assembled in the U. S. A.

Description

Stay connected in your home or office with SureCall’s Fusion4Home, the most powerful cell phone signal booster that provides strong, reliable connections for talk, text, and fast 4G LTE data throughout homes or small buildings in the most remote and challenging areas. The Fusion4Home features 2XP technology, which doubles the uplink transmission power (up to 26 dBm) to maintain your connection throughout the weakest cell signal environments. Assembled and tested in the USA with outstanding build quality, award-winning technologies, all-carrier compatibility, and world-class support, the Fusion4Home is the premier cell phone signal booster for the home or small building.

Brand: SureCall


Special Feature: durable


Color: Fusion4Home Yagi/Whip


Included Components: Fusion4home Yagi/whip Kit


Product Dimensions: 9.7"D x 6.9"W x 20.3"H


Product Dimensions: 20.3 x 9.7 x 6.9 inches


Item Weight: 7.09 pounds


Item model number: SC-PolyH-72-YRA-Kit


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer: No


Special features: durable


Other display features: Wireless


Color: Fusion4Home Yagi/Whip


Whats in the box: Fusion4home Yagi/whip Kit


Department: SC-POLYH-72-YRA


Manufacturer: SURECALL


Date First Available: January 15, 2016


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Friday, Jul 18

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Will improve an existing weak cell signal.
Color: Flare 3.0 w/ Directional Antenna
Why did you pick this product vs others?: I bought this for my cabin in NH. We get a single bar as measured by our cell phones. We could make and get calls, but audio quality poor and web browsing was painful, with many pages freezing before displaying. I didn't expect miracles, but with this product I can at least now surf the web without swearing and can reliably make and take phone calls. It was pretty easy to install (I also bought a pole to mount on the wall to extend above the apex of my roof). It was easy to install if you are moderately handy with common tools and can climb a ladder. To orient it properly, I downloaded the free OpenSignal app. They have a simple compass that points to the closest cell tower for your service provider. Before making the installation permanent, I used the SureCall app to measure signal strength, adjusting the antenna 5-10 degrees +/-. They provide 50' of coax, which was perfect for me, but for you will depend on the dimensions of your home or apartment. If you need more, you can get an extension coax. They say that the vertical distance between antenna and modem should be at least 25'. Mine was about 18'-20' and the app reported it was "good". I can imagine apartment dwellers may find it difficult to get this much vertical distance. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on June 30, 2025 by Tom Smith

  • Everything you need to know about this
Color: Flare 3.0 w/ Directional Antenna
Do you have crummy service and are desperate for improvement? Do you have patience and problem solving abilities? Have you been scouring the internet for reviews on cell boosters to decide which to blow hundreds of dollars on? Well I did and I got it right on the first purchase in my small A-frame home in rural Alaska, here’s what I can share: Get the Flare 3.0 with Yagi directional antennae (the pointy one). Decide how you’re going to mount this antennae, we did galvanized steel pipe with an elbow joint so it’s super easy to rotate the antennae for fine tuning. Also mount it somewhere that it’s not a huge pain to rotate this thing, you’ll be doing it A LOT in the beginning. We mounted ours outside an upstairs window, within reach from inside house. Hunt down your carriers nearest cell towers. Cellreception.com (other sites exist too, give it a google) has good maps you can then pinpoint over in google maps. Google maps usually has a little blue triangle that tells you which direction your phone is pointing - this is huge to make sure your antennae is pointing right at the cell tower. Line up the direction your phone and the antennae are pointing. Try a couple different towers, sometimes based on topography/tower strength a slightly farther tower could be better. Download the OpenSignal app and use it A LOT. Run the speed test in areas that do have cell service to help you hone in on what to expect. Run the test all over the house, the yard, etc. Goal is to find part of your house/yard that has a bit of service, set the antennae there and point it STRAIGHT at the carrier’s tower. Connect the coax cable and power cord to the Flare device. Now you’ll probably end up with the yellow flashing lights of oscillation death. You’ll learn to understand, accept and befriend this flashing yellow punk. Oscillation happens when the signals put off from antennae and indoor device interfere (like when you bring microphone too close to an amplifier and get that terrible feedback noise, same concept). The manual will tell you to eternally move your indoor device (the Flare) farther away. Before you know it you’ll be three towns over and the light will still be flashing “too close”. Here’s some solutions to oscillation: - Move the devices further apart- vertical vs horizontal distance have greatly different effects. Moving one or both devices away from each other vertically works better than horizontally - Place indoor device so antennae direction is exactly opposite, so Flare is “behind” yagi antennae (but also hopefully below and 20ish feet away) - Put something metal between antennae and indoor device - careful here because you don’t want that metal to also block the indoor device from sending signals to your phone! I used a cast iron pan for a while when troubleshooting and it worked well - Finally the best advice we found, place the Flare directly blow the Yagi antennae. If you think of how signal would wave out of an antennae, the space right beneath it gets almost no waves, in this situation ground zero is a good place to be. We now have significantly better service after lots of tweaking our setup. We still have the flashy yellow, but it’s a slow flash. The goal is to get away from the red+yellow flash of death (means oscillation so severe the system shuts off). Yellow means there is oscillation and the more rapid the flashing the worse it is. You can get good service on slow flash yellow, use the app and move indoor device around (with tips above) to fine tune this for your home. Good luck and god speed friends. Make a plan for the places you’ll try placing the antennae/indoor device and have patience. Having better cell service is magical, but it comes with lllllots of troubleshooting and trying new tactics. Keep an eye on your 30 day window and when in doubt, send it back for a replacement. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on November 5, 2022 by Leddy Leds

  • Works well and provides good troubleshooting info
Color: Fusion4Home Yagi/Whip
I started my home booster adventure with a WeBoost Connect 4G and ended up returning it because it couldn't handle the fact that in my area we have Verizon and AT&T both operating LTE in the 700Mhz band, where they are right next to each other in the frequency spectrum. The AT&T signal comes in a bit stringer than Verizon and I need Verizon, but for the WeBoost these are indistinguishable. The result was that the WeBoost didn't amplify the Verizon LTE signal enough causing my phone to stick to 3G (which is in a different band). I purchased the SureCall unit because of the manual gain adjustments, which I expected would let me tune down the 3G signal so my phone would actually hop to 4G giving me decent data transfer rates. The short of the story is that (a) the per-band tunig does work and help, (b) the LED indicators are much more informative allowing me to understand what is happening much better, and (c) this booster provides some degree of distinction between the two adjacent LTE carriers. This unit is also much better built being all-aluminum and the exterior Yagi has higher gain. I have had several email exchanges with the SureCall support and got great responses. The only downside is that I got the version with the little indoor omni instead of the panel antenna and the panel is better. But I am now buying a ceiling dome, which I hope to be better than either of the other two. In summary, if you're hesitating between the WeBoost Connect 4G and the SureCall Fusion4Home I would recommend the SureCall. One thing that is somewhat confusing is what the various LED flash patterns really mean. There is a yellow insert sheet that describes them, but it's a bit incomplete. Here are a few more notes: - If an LED is OFF it means that the booster is operating in that band at the gain set by the dial, i.e., it's doing great (this state is completely missing from the docs). - If an LED is flashing YELLOW it means that automatic gain control (AGC) is reducing the gain (amplification) in that band below what is set because of feedback between the indoor and outdoor antennas. If you want a stronger indoor signal you need to increase separation. - If an LED is flashing RED it means that AGC is reducing the gain in that band below what is set because the signal from the tower is too strong (I suspect the reduction is primarily on the transmit-to-tower side). In my configuration I'm having insufficient antenna separation for maximum amplification and I'm not that far from towers so what I observe is the following. If I turn the gain for a band all the way down the LED becomes red indicating that the band is off. As I turn up the gain the LED goes to blinking red indicating that the tower signal is strong and AGC is limiting the gain (I presume in the transmit to tower direction). As I turn the gain up further the LED switches to blinking yellow indicating that AGC is also limiting the gain transmitting indoors due to feedback between the two antennas. All this has allowed me to learn much more about what is really happening and I have been able to tune the bands so everything works OK for me. The next step will be to purchase a ceiling dome antenna for indoors because it radiates much less upwards to where the outdoor antenna is. The alternative would be to relocate or raise the outdoor antenna, which is more difficult for me. Update may 2017: the booster is still working well for me. I ended up purchasing an indoor dome antenna in order to increase the separation between the outdoor antenna on my roof and the indoor antenna. I selected a "DomeAnt-Alpha Omnidirectional Ceiling Antenna for Boosters, Amplifiers, Repeaters" after contacting WirEng and getting confirmation that this antenna has the least upwards radiation, i.e., interferes the least with the outside antenna above my roof. This antenna made a big difference for me. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on April 25, 2016 by Thorsten von Eicken

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