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We Can’t Recommend iPhone 4: Consumer Reports


Consumer Reports performed lab tests on the iPhone 4 and determined that the phone’s alleged antenna problem is completely legit. As a result, the organization declined to recommend the device, suggesting that consumers buy the older 3GS model instead.

The steel bands that run around the phone’s edges function as antennae, and Apple touted this as a selling point. Unfortunately, consumers discovered a design flaw immediately after the phone launched. When you cover up a small gap between two of the bands on the corner of the phone, you experience dramatic signal loss.

As you’ll see in the video above, Consumer Reports tested AT&T carrier signals on the phone using lab equipment and determined that touching that spot on the phone can cause enough signal loss to drop a call. It also confirmed that this is not just an issue where the phone’s software is inaccurately reporting signal strength. Previous tests have had similar results.

Apple has struggled to get ahead of the story in the press, which has been peppered with news reports and editorials about the problem.

People began to realize that Apple probably knew about the flaw all along, because the bumper cases it launched alongside the phone do little except prevent skin contact with the problem spot. Although the bumpers don’t make the iPhone 4 much bigger than its predecessor, they cost $29.

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