As I am writing this message now:
If I hold my phone with my right hand, no lines of wifi connectivity, but I an still connected.
Now i hold the phone with left and write with my right, one line appears.
Now I search with my Nook Color for wifi and there are 2 lines of connectivity.
I search with my sisters iPhone, there are 2 lines of connectivity.
If we do a bit search on the net, there is a big number of people that have this problem. Yes I do have wifi, but it is definitely weaker, and I have to hold the phone in a specific way.
Concluding: is definitely NOT users fault but Motorola's fault. Unfortunately most probably this would be a hardware problem, thus an update would not fix this.
Obviously unfortunately there is no current fix for this on the phone...
By the way do you have a case on your RAZR? Maybe the fix that iPhone users implemented a couple of years ago might fix the wifi reception for holding the phone with right hand... I currently do not have a case on my phone.
Sent from my Moto RAZR
Slight reception increases and decreases mean very little when it comes to actual connectivity. Frankly there's no correlation between 2 bars on your phone and 2 bars on any other brand or model of phone. The individual manufacturer sets the number of bars arbitrarily to a particular decibel level that they themselves determine fits within a range that they can get usable connectivity. If your phone remains connected in that situation, that's all that matters. A better evaluation would be to look at the actual signal strengths of the various devices in decibels, and then see if there is a considerably higher or lower decibel level from device to device. You may be quite surprised to find that the decibel levels are comparable. Furthermore, Motorola radios are arguably the best radios on any phone, and even with lower signal levels they are able to maintain connectivity, due to highly refined filtering, distortion and crosstalk elimination techniques. So even at lower decibel levels, the Motorola radios often outperform other radios with stronger signal strength.
As for the cases, no I don't use a case, but unless the case is metal it shouldn't either negatively or positively influence signal strength. The problems that the iPhone had, called "Antennagate", was related to the fact that the metal shroud (the silver strip that runs around the outer edge of the phone), is actually segmented into 2 (and in some illustrations 3) separate parts and each one is in itself an antenna.
View attachment 51098View attachment 51097View attachment 51095View attachment 51096
In the first picture you see the circle around the line at the bottom on the volume control side of the phone. That line is a separator between the antennas. It's the same line pointed to in the 2nd pic. In the third pic you acutally see two separate antennas, and in the 4th pic, you see the old (showing 3 antennas) versus new, where the lines have been eliminated or moved. The problem was that when people would hold the phone and touch both antennas at the line, the connection made with their finger or palm caused the two separate antennas to become one, and that created a problem for the phone.
The Motorola phones don't use external antennas like this. The antennas are actually inside the casing away from fingers or palms, so a case won't prevent anything that's not a problem already.
I am willing to bet that the data rate your phone provides while on wifi, even when you are only showing 1 bar, will exceed what the other devices are able to show even with 2 bars. I sit on my bed in the bedroom, at the opposite end of my home from where the router is, I only get 1 bar in the bedroom, and yet I am still able to stream video and have never suffered any drops of connectivity with my RAZR, my wife's RAZR, or my new RAZR MAXX, as well as my earlier D2 and even the OG Droid. I'll bet if I had your phone in my home, it would perform just as well.