I think that short stubby antenna on the G4/G5's is part of the reason for better performance in simulcast systems (attenuation). They sell those bullet antennas on e-bay. Give it a whirl guys.
The G4/G5's performance improves with better antennas. It is rather interesting that scanners need attenuation to get results, which is not guaranteed, while other radios are looking for more gain.
Cell phone manufactures have figured out a way to prevent a phone from connecting to two towers at the same time, while scanner manufactures are still struggling with that.
I realize that cell phones also transmit which makes the process easier as it sends position data to the tower, but surely, can't they make a scanner that can detect signal strength and lock onto the strongest signal?
It seems so basic. No?
You might be thinking of multicast, where different towers might transmit the same radio traffic on
different frequencies. This is where reading signal strength and switching to different towers would be relevant. Scanners don't do this, but it is independent of simulcast issues.
Simulcast is specifically designed so that the radio thinks it is a single site that covers a large area because all the towers transmit the same information on the
same frequencies. There is no way to differentiate between the towers, and there is no reason to with a properly designed radio.
Scanners need to be redesigned in order to handle simulcast properly. It really should be a basic fix at this point. Simulcast has been around for more than a decade and the solution is well known and proven.