Did you say that you checked to make sure QoS was disabled, "Adaptive QoS"->QoS? I'm not sure if QoS affects speed tests, but I've always turned QoS off.
I checked and QoS is turned off. Appreciate all of your help!
Did you say that you checked to make sure QoS was disabled, "Adaptive QoS"->QoS? I'm not sure if QoS affects speed tests, but I've always turned QoS off.
What was your ISP plan? If you're consistently getting 200/20, then does that sound good to you? Those are decent latency values, BTW, for WiFi at least; you might get down to the 10ms range via GbE. "Loaded" is the ping latency, or bi-directional latency, during a download, and from my experience 69ms is pretty good. Also, in general, midday speedtests may be all over the place especially if you have an cable-ISP, as really you're sharing bandwidth with your favorite neighbors.Thanks. I just ran fast.com with these results. I ran it a few times actually and the highest download was 220 and the lowest was 180.
And all of my testing is done from a table at this location. This is the distance to the router.
What was your ISP plan? If you're consistently getting 200/20, then does that sound good to you? Those are good latency values, BTW, for WiFi at least; you might get down to the 10ms range via GbE.
I'm at a loss then, because iperf3 is saying that you have plenty of WiFi b/w to cover your 300/20 plan. Sorry, I'm afraid that's all of the assistance I can provide.
@seadragon, you can try the following:
- Go to Administration -> Privacy, and then click Withdraw.
- Go to Network Map -> Status, and then, in the "Ethernet Ports" section, make sure that your modem is connected at 1 Gbps (or more).
- Go to Wireless -> General, and for 5 GHz band, select the Auto select channel including DFS channels check box, and then select 160 MHz in the Channel bandwidth list (unfortunately, my router does not support 160 MHz, so I don't know whether this option is available for selection on your router; if not, select 20/40/80/160). Alternatively, you can try selecting 80 MHz.
- Make sure that Smart Connect is disabled.
- Restart the router and connect, for example, your fastest device (to 5 GHz).
- After the device connects, what are the reported speeds for it when clicking View List on the Network Map page?
- Run the Speedtest again, but from a certain distance, not too close to the router.
Just out of curiosity, what cable modem do you have?
turn off the "a" and "b" and "g" modes on the radios. There should not be any devices that need those these days and that can drag things down if something tries to connect.
You should have only AC or AX if possible. If you have to have N for specific devices, then ok. Otherwise keep it off if config lets you.
@seadragon Can you confirm that your tests were done only using 5GHz and the client hadn't actually switched to 2.4GHz.
For testing purposes I would temporarily disable 802.11ax / WiFi 6 mode on 5 GHz and see if your speed tests stabilise. Leave Wireless Mode on Auto.
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