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Quoting from https://bit.ly/2t30lXv:

GSM “buzz” occurs with GSM (TDMA) phones,” he said. “It is when the phone is communicating with the tower on the GSM control channel, which is not power regulated and can be as high 1 watt, depending on the phone model. It is pulsed data bursts and does not happen on the LTE side (the reason CDMA phones remain relatively quiet).”

Phones using GSM standards cause most buzzing. Phones using LTE and CDMA rarely do. GSM networks are less common than they used to be, but are still ubiquitous, and even non-GSM phones may “step down” to other networks for various reasons.




The Motorola iDEN (Nextel) protocol was very GSM-like in some ways, but the reverse control channel was even louder, and the modulation even harsher. A Nextel in the audience was every live sound engineer's nightmare.




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