When Cell Service Fails — Common Scenarios

Cell networks fail in predictable ways during disasters. Understanding when and how they fail helps you plan for when mesh becomes your primary communication path.

Mesh is a supplement, not a lifeline. LoRa mesh is best-effort with no guaranteed delivery: messages may silently fail to arrive, the shared radio channel can saturate under heavy load, and coverage depends on powered relay nodes being in range. It is NOT a replacement for 911, NWS alerts, or licensed amateur/voice nets. For any life-threatening emergency, use 911/voice first; use mesh as a fallback when those are unavailable.

Power Outage

What happens to cell service: Cell sites are required to have at least 8 hours of battery backup (24 hours at switching sites), and many add generators. In an extended blackout without refueling, battery-only sites can go silent within hours, and broader coverage degrades over the following day or two.

What mesh does: Nodes run entirely on their own batteries — no grid required. A fully charged T-Echo or similar device runs roughly 12–48 hours depending on message volume and screen-on time (treat this as an estimate; actual runtime depends on the device and how it is used). Depending on the device and screen use, a 10,000 mAh bank can extend a node's runtime to several days.

Practical steps:

Wildfire Evacuation

What happens to cell service: Towers in or near fire zones are destroyed or de-energized. A mass evacuation can spike demand and congest remaining towers, making calls and data slow or unreliable, sometimes within minutes of an evacuation order.

What mesh does: LoRa mesh has no central tower to overload, so it is more resilient than cellular under mass demand. But the radio channel is shared and half-duplex; heavy local traffic still causes collisions and delays, so keep messages short and infrequent.

Practical steps:

Earthquake

What happens to cell service: Physical tower damage, severed fiber backhaul, and simultaneous call attempts make cell networks unreliable in the hours following a major earthquake. Call failure rates can be very high near the epicenter of a major quake.

What mesh does: No central infrastructure to fail. If your node is intact and powered, it communicates with any nearby node — even if every cell tower in the region is down.

Practical steps:

Hurricane and Severe Weather

What happens to cell service: Tower damage, flooding, and grid failure cumulatively degrade coverage. Service is often worst in the 12–48 hours after a direct hit.

What mesh does: Nodes deployed before the storm can operate through and after it.

Practical steps:

What Mesh Cannot Do

Honest limitations — important to understand before you depend on mesh in an emergency:


Revision #3
Created 2026-05-16 18:46:03 UTC by Mesh America Admin
Updated 2026-06-09 18:04:11 UTC by Mesh America Admin