Slow wifi speeds with gigabit
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02-13-2020 06:18 PM
I recently upgraded from 150 internet to gigabit. I'm frustrated with the lack of upgrade (for lack of better words) at the devices over WiFi.
Long story short this is what we've done so far:
Replaced t3200 modem
Replaced white box upstream of modem
Replaced all cables with new cat 6 cables
Now these are the results
Hardwired cat 6 from 3200 to newer win 10 laptop, ul and dl speeds of 750-900mbps (fast.com and ookla/Telus). All good right?
Switch to wifi 5g band off the t3200 and get maximum 120mbps from about 5-10 feet away. Move to another room and speeds go down to 40-60. This is no different than what I had with my internet 150??
Same issue with my Linksys velop mesh system. I can do a speed test of the incoming signal and it's good 800+ both ways, but the fastest wifi signal I can get is 120mbps. 25' from a node I'm getting 40-60.
I'm baffled. I know wifi isn't as fast as wired but it should be able to do 50% at least?
Is there something about this signal that doesn't lend itself to fast wifi speeds?
Thanks in advance for any help
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02-14-2020 02:05 AM
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02-14-2020 09:14 AM
5GHz wifi doesn't necessarily mean extreme speeds. It'll depend on the wireless hardware on both the router end and the specific wireless card your device has. Most routers will advertise a max wireless speed but it's typically the combined speed for all antennas rather than the specific speed for one device. If you are seeing the same wireless speeds on both the T3200M as well as the mesh network then the issue isn't related to one router and may be with the wireless device you are using.
What specific wireless device are you testing the speed with? (Make/model/year) Does the wireless chipset in it support 802.11ac or just 802.11n?
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02-14-2020 09:29 AM
Hi Nighthawk
2 cell phones - Moto G6 and G7 Power. Both running android 9, release dates 2018/19
Windows 10 laptop - Lenovo 310 - date of manufacture October 26,2016
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02-14-2020 09:31 AM
I also have an older refurbished samsung chromebook 2, which ironically gets the highest speeds.
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02-17-2020 05:19 PM
hi there jgg123
Wireless speeds is also dependent on signal noise that might exist in your neighborhood; the more clustered houses are the worse the results.
I would test first using a hardwired connection (using ethernet network cables). the most reliable test happens through iperf v3 and not your usual flash web browser app.
note: your network test also is limited on the capacity of the server on the other side to meet the speeds.
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02-16-2021 10:36 PM
