Forum Discussion

E-Smithee's avatar
E-Smithee
Neighbour
6 years ago

Slow Internet Speeds ( Gigabit Plan )

I recently made the switch to gigabit internet and was quite disappointed to see that there is no significant improvement over my previous plan (150). I understand that speeds may vary and that speeds are device dependant. I also understand that over a wireless connection, I won’t be able to achieve highest speeds but averaging ~25 Mpbs at best and even lower speeds on certain devices is a cause for concern in my opinion. Can someone give me advice on what to do. Since I don’t have optik tv, would it be possible for me to use a superior modem or would not be worth it? Are there any other options for me or am I stuck paying for a top dollar for slow speeds? 

8 Replies

Replies have been turned off for this discussion
  • E-Smithee ,

     

    If you main issue is WiFi speed, it is probably worthwhile to look at what your neighbours are using for channels and potentially contributing to interference. This link is good at determining what the issue is. If you split your 2.4G and 5G SSID's your can see where most of the activity is and avoid the more popular channels. 2.4G has more range but very limited channels to choose from to avoid interference (1, 6, 11). 5G channels are more isolated but is more limited in range. I downloaded this simple exe, WiFiInfoView, that shows you what it going on when you install it on a laptop that has wifi. The default screen shows you all channels in range, and of interest. However, if you click on Options, Summary View, it can give you a simpler view of which channels are more heavily loaded. In general it is best to avoid channel 6 on 2.4G as it is the default. There are more choices on 5G. Just avoid ones used by your neighbours. 

  • NFtoBC's avatar
    NFtoBC
    Icon for Community Power User rankCommunity Power User

    Also, remember Gigabit internet is a multi-stream service. It is meant to give satisfactory speeds to a number of individuals simultaneously, not the full speed to to a single client.

     

    Does your telecom closet have a metal case or door? If so, that would cause Wi-Fi issues.

     

    How many apartments surround yours? The more surrounding Wi-Fi, the more signal clashes, and the less speed.

     

  • What speeds are you getting when you're plugged directly into the router via ethernet?

    • E-Smithee's avatar
      E-Smithee
      Neighbour
      I’m in a new apartment that’s connected to Fiber. The modem is placed inside of a panel in the closet and there’s no way to plug in directly to the modem unless I either stand in my closet or run a cable through the middle of my apartment. I understand that a hardwired connection is much faster but for the price point, I expected to be able Pik Tv without connection dropping every ~20 minutes.
      • loosemeat's avatar
        loosemeat
        Advocate

        To help diagnose the issue, I recommend seeing if there is a strong signal if you're connected directly to the modem.

        If you're getting the expected speed when you're plugged in, then that eliminates a whole bunch of steps from troubleshooting.

        I would suggest plugging in and then running a speed test from speedtest.net and sharing your results here.