Hillary Clinton has joined the ranks of Americans who have been brought to their wit's end by their wireless provider – after her campaign’s pricey communications gear was on the fritz during one of the pivotal moments of the presidential campaign – leaving the candidate completely in the dark that the was FBI reopening its investigation of her emails.

Now, Clinton's fed-up campaign team has gone public with its frustrations.

Clinton was flying from New York to Iowa Friday when the stunning bombshell rocked the political world and shook up the 2016 presidential campaign.

But one of the last people to learn the news was was the woman who at the moment could see a clear path to the presidency. She was seated at the front of her plane, near longtime aide Huma Abedin – who as it turned out was at the center of the stunning developments which could yet see her prosecuted and jailed.

'Gogo – more like no go,' fumed Clinton campaign spokesman Nick Merrill aboard Clinton's campaign plane Sunday night as the FBI story continued to proliferate, but with only spotty service to follow the developments.

A confident Clinton briefs reporters aboard her campaign plane on October 26, two days before news of the FBI inquiry into her emails broke – though Clinton was among the last to know due to faulty wireless aboard the aircraft

Wireless service aboard Hillary Clinton's campaign plane has been unreliable - and was like this when the dramatic FBI news broke

The problem 'has continued for weeks,' Merrill complained.

The situation hasn't been any easier for reporters following Clinton, including DailyMail.com, which was among those left out of the loop when the FBI bombshell broke.

On Wednesday, CNN national politics reporter M.J. Lee tweeted a complaint of her own to the provider: '@infightwifi on the Clinton plane is just awful. Not available for most of a 5-hr flight so far. That's not a "temporary" outage,' she wrote.

A representative from Gogo responded in an effort to address the problem: '@mj_lee Hi, I am sorry we have let you down. Please DM your email address. I'd like to make it up to you! -Grace.'

Merrill, having suffered through weeks of problems, picked up the banner on behalf of an information-starved press. He retweeted the company's response and wrote: 'A voucher isn't going to cut it. Looking forward to seeing how you make it up to our press corps @Gogo.'

Clinton's campaign decided to air its high-altitude wireless concerns, after dealing directly with its provider for weeks without success.

Internet coverage and speed, when it is available on the former secretary of state's plane far below standards typical of commercial flights.

When a reporter sent out a tweet quoting one of Merrill's wireless remarks a few days ago, he did not complain, and followed up with another jab in front of the a collection of national and international journalists when a reporter noted there was a flight delay. 'Is that Gogo's doing?' he quipped.

On the day when the bombshell FBI news broke, Clinton was so oblivious that she even agreed to a photo shoot with famed traveling celebrity photographer Annie Liebovitz, who was on hand when word finally got through and had to cut short her minute-long photo session.

Traveling CNN reporter MJ Lee took her own complaints to the wireless provider

Gogo apologized for having letter her down and offered to make it up to her

Merrill retweeted the exchange, and encouraged the company to 'make it up to our press corps'

AIR RAGE: Press secretary Nick Merrill has gone public with his complaints about the company providing wireless service aboard Hillary Clinton's campaign plane

The candidate's schedule was delayed for about 20 minutes while aides huddled with her on the ground and attempted to process the new information on a day that already had a scheduled packed with two events and three flights.

Now, rather than seething in private, her campaign is talking openly about the bad connectivity in flight, which frequently is far inferior to what is available on standard commercial flights for a reasonable fee.

Gogo on its website calls itself the leading provider of inflight internet and entertainment.' DailyMail.com reached out to the company Monday morning from a functioning wireless connection on the ground at an airport, but didn't get a response.

In the past, when it has received complaints about coverage on the Clinton campaign plane, the company has stressed the large number of devices and people attempting to get online simultaneously, and has maintained that the signal is sufficiently strong to function. Reporters and photographers travel with an array of gear.

Attempts to log on frequently yield error messages

The wireless was out when news broke the the FBI was looking at Clinton emails again

GOGO NO ESTA DISPONSIBLE POR EL MOMENTO: A multilingual message informs users that their wireless is out, again

Also in the dark about the FBI bombshell was longtime aide Huma Abedin. It was later revealed that it was her own emails, preserved in a laptop owned by her husband, Anthony Weiner, that triggered the development

Clinton’s campaign pays for the service at a premium rate. It has contacted the provider multiple times to try to improve service.

As a stop-gap, her press staff has resorted to walking up in down the aisles nagging reporters, producers, and photographers – who travel with multiple electronic devices – to turn off their wireless devices in an effort to boost connection speeds.

At one point, Merrill tried to orchestrate a delicate Internet sharing arrangement, whereby people on the plane took turns, but the system proved unworkable. There is also a strict one-device rule in effect, but with no enforcement or verification mechanism.

Clinton's campaign uses charter company XTRAir, which provides a Boeing 737 with a specialized 'Stronger Together' paint job. The charter company did not immediately respond to a request for comment.