Dan Dascalescu
Occasional Visitor
TL;DR: I recently bought my first "prosumer" router, an ASUS RT-AC68U, and set it up in repeater mode in front of my phone hotspot (Google Pixel on Verizon, unlimited data). Suspecting some Play-Fi speakers might drop audio due to the router, and wanting to eliminate the router as the cause, I ran an overnight ping test, which showed that the router introduces 0.7% to 1% of packet loss. Is this normal?
Test details:
Test details:
- ping to 8.8.8.8 from two laptops simultaneously
- 8 hours overnight (~1am - ~9am), two nights in a row
- closed apps to make sure no active connections were going on beyond what the OS might do
- laptops placed ~3ft from the router with no obstructions
- Night 1: ping from MacBook Pro laptop connected directly to the hostpot, so MBP -> hotspot -> 8.8.8.8: 0.3% packet loss. It's an LTE link (~-105dB), so I guess that's normal.
- Night 1: ping from Ubuntu laptop connected to the router's 5GHz AP, so Ubuntu -> router -> hotspot -> 8.8.8.8. 1% packet loss
- swapped the connections but kept everything else constant, including the location of the laptops
- Night 2: Ubuntu -> hotspot -> 8.8.8.8: 1% packet loss
- Night 2: MBP -> router -> hotspot -> 8.8.8.8: 2% packet loss