Forum Discussion
SpeedyDinosaur
6 years agoFriendly Neighbour
Speed slowly gets to normal on speedtest
Hi, Something odd that I have noticed was that whenever I do a speedtest, my download and upload speed will slowly ramp up to the speed I pay for. Before when I started the speedtest it would go ...
- 6 years ago
You have subscribed to a top of the line internet package. Need to remember that in most of the world they don't see a fraction of this and consumer routers simply aren't build to deal with that kind of speed, especially if you enable some sort of encryption on them.
Very easy way for you to see if the home router is cause of your slowdown.
Now that home router is on port 1 in bridged mode, unplug the RJ45 from your PC that goes into the home router and plug it directly into the modem in one of the other free LAN ports and run the same speed test. If you don't get the slowdown you see with your previous setup its time to either reconfigure or replace the home router.
If / When you add on router encryption/vpn to get line speed with your good fibre connection you need some serious specs most consumer hardware cant handle this.
Here is just one example of the hardware (and cost) scaling when you get into speeds the big boys are playing at.
https://www.netgate.com/products/appliances/
I have no affiliation with Netgate, however I do custom build routers using the same open source Pfsense platform.
Foonus
6 years agoAmbassador
Ideally if you are using a third party router with the 3200 modem it will be set (the modem) to port 1 bridged mode. You hook your home router then to port 1. Simply this allows port 1 to act as a pass through to allow your router to handle routeing instead of using the modems built in routing. This is why you can't access the modems admin page through your home router. This is normal/good, if you need to access it plug into any of the other 4 LAN ports on the T3200M.
For now you are already better off because you had double NAT situation you fixed by enabling the bridged mode. Which home router are you working with?
Foonus
6 years agoAmbassador
You have subscribed to a top of the line internet package. Need to remember that in most of the world they don't see a fraction of this and consumer routers simply aren't build to deal with that kind of speed, especially if you enable some sort of encryption on them.
Very easy way for you to see if the home router is cause of your slowdown.
Now that home router is on port 1 in bridged mode, unplug the RJ45 from your PC that goes into the home router and plug it directly into the modem in one of the other free LAN ports and run the same speed test. If you don't get the slowdown you see with your previous setup its time to either reconfigure or replace the home router.
If / When you add on router encryption/vpn to get line speed with your good fibre connection you need some serious specs most consumer hardware cant handle this.
Here is just one example of the hardware (and cost) scaling when you get into speeds the big boys are playing at.
https://www.netgate.com/products/appliances/
I have no affiliation with Netgate, however I do custom build routers using the same open source Pfsense platform.
- SpeedyDinosaur6 years agoFriendly Neighbour
Hi Nighthawk. The issue has mostly been resolved after I restarted the second router and switched the ethernet cord. It still ramps up, but it'll jump up very fast unlike before.
- SpeedyDinosaur6 years agoFriendly Neighbour
Yes I know that it is an extreme privilege to have access to such high speed I'm just trying to get as much as what I'm paying for.
I forgot to note that I am not using the second router in this situation as a replacement to the modem. I have a long ethernet cord that is connected to the modem, and then an ethernet cord from the second router to my computer. I do this so that I can also have Wi-Fi. Which is why I turned off bridge mode.
The modem I have is the T3200M. Something I found that was super strange was when I plugged in the ethernet cord directly from the modem to my computer is I had a different IP address, but when I connected with Wi-Fi to the modem I had the same IP as before.
The ramp up thing isn't really an issue anymore after I restarted the second router and switched out the ethernet cord, I very much appreciate the advice though! Thank you
- Nighthawk6 years ago
Community Power User
You'll also need to factor in that many speedtest sites do climb like that for ultra high speed connections. I see the same thing when testing using speedtest.net from my workplace's gigabit Shaw connection that is using the professional networking gear.
Fast.com is one speedtest I've found that'll hit gigabit for speed tests extremely fast.
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