Despite the orthogonality of LTE's uplink transmission, it can happen that signals which are received at the base station with low power are drown out by strong signals from other users. Reason is the limited quantization resolution of the base station's analog-to-digital converter. Since this effect causes a quality of service degradation for users at the cell edge, the dynamic receive power range of uplink signals arriving at the base station should be upper limited. However, setting an adequate upper limit for the dynamic receive power range is not trivial since many effects, such as quantization noise, fast fading etc., decrease the dynamic range which the analog-to-digital converter can handle in theory. In this paper, we measure the maximal uplink dynamic receive power range, denoted as uplink dynamic range threshold, for our LTE-like measurement setup by monitoring the uplink bit-error-rate of a first user while decreasing its transmit power during the presence of a second adjacently scheduled user with fixed transmit power. As the measured threshold is 31.4 ± 7.6 dB, we can conclude that a link-budget-based estimation of the dynamic receive power range, which has been published previously, is accurate since its result coincides with the measurement.