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Re: What download speed should i expect?
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Re: What download speed should i expect?
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Re: What download speed should i expect?
It sounds like you are on the 300k service not the 768k that you thought. The speed test only mentions 768 kb/s because you told it that you are on that speed. Give NTL a call to check what they have you down as. You could check the config file for your modem.Have a look at http://www.cableforum.co.uk/board/article.php?a=18 to see how to check your provisioned speed or Robin Walkers site to find out how to check for the config file.
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Re: What download speed should i expect?
https://www.cableforum.co.uk/images/...2005/10/15.gif https://www.cableforum.co.uk/images/...2005/10/15.gif Ian you are amazing!! Tried your link to NTL and found that they have me down as 300kb/s. (Gunna call them later today) Maybe it was the offer that they had on @ the time! "Half price for three months". Maybe what they really mean is "Half line" for three months. Anyway i will post how i get on with "Customer Services"https://www.cableforum.co.uk/images/...2005/09/13.gif You are so clever. Thanks all. https://www.cableforum.co.uk/images/local/2005/10/3.gif. Keep taking the pills! and smoking the stuff!
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Re: What download speed should i expect?
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oiiiiiiiiiiiii i thought of it first ;) :D :D :D :D |
Re: What download speed should i expect?
I ran that speed test and got these results.
http://img153.exs.cx:81/img153/5586/s13ny.jpg The RWIN is set at 15000. Is this too high? |
Re: What download speed should i expect?
Using the DSL Reports formula, http://www.dslreports.com/faq/578
of ping (in mS, but should be a LARGE packet ping, this may be a small packet) multiplied by line speed (in Kbit/s - the K cancels the m) x 1.5 (fudge factor) divided by 8 (bits in a byte). 169 x 768 x 1.5 / 8 = 24336 Your RWIN is actually too small to achieve full speed on a path with a delay exceeding 100mS |
Re: What download speed should i expect?
;) Happy again! ;) Turned out that NTL had me on a 300kb/s connection.("Doh")
This was easly changed to 768kb/s by loggin on to the NTL Homeworld website and upgrading. "Took seconds to do!" Noticed the differance straight away. i can,t wait for the speed upgrade. Anyone know how this will happen? "Will we all just wake up one morning and find our web browsing running @ warp factor?" or will we be notified by a van driving around with a loud speaker bolted to the roof? Thank you all again for your advise and pointing me in the right direction.(Cool):) __________________ ;) Oh @and thanks Paul for thinking of it first!:p: __________________ :confused: Matth. "Havn,t got a clue" "what you where on about". But thanks the same. |
Re: What download speed should i expect?
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One byte is about 8.5 bits, 1kByte/s = 1024 bit/s So I reckon ntl 2MB will be 230kBytes per second if you can find a server that will download fast enough! |
Re: What download speed should i expect?
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This should deliver 120-125kB/s per Mbit. One byte is 8 bits, no more no less, and 1Mbit is 1,000,000 bits. The extra is a historical thing put in there to account for TCP/IP overheads a bit. Chances are it won't require a modem reboot, modems will be made to resynch and acquire the new speeds. |
Re: What download speed should i expect?
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Memory manufacturers usually use the more 'computer science' correct 1 byte = 8 bits 1 kbyte = 1024 bits (= 2^10) 1 Mbyte = 1024 kbyte = 1,048,576 bytes (2^20) so I'm sure you know better than me what the ntl config file will say - I'm looking forward to finding out what definition of 1Mbit NTL use (but I still expect a million bits which is consistent with 10/100 Mbit Ethernet definition I believe). And yes my 8.5 bits per byte is an approximation to allow for packet overhead and other losses, for a precise value see http://homepage.ntlworld.com/robin.d...html#kilobytes |
Re: What download speed should i expect?
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These days it is commonly accepted that a byte consists of 8 bits. It is impossible to have a byte size that isn't a whole number. The prefixes kilo, mega and giga mean different things depending on their usage. In communication speeds kilo means 1,000 whereas in file sizes kilo means 2 to the power 10 or 1,024. |
Re: What download speed should i expect?
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FYI: I use 8.25 as my figure for bits/sec to Bytes/sec (and then /1024 for K bytes/sec). :) |
Re: What download speed should i expect?
hmmm .. my speed reports are mostly the same as Albies (705 on download) .. but sometimes with massive ping times/time-outs on "foriegn" urls, and often packet loss between 2 and 10 % ?? Also about 30% of the times I run the test it can't do the download test because of server timeouts or other errors ?
Got my RWIN set at 18000 currently, tried ranges from 15000 up to 65500 with no noticable difference. Not bothered reporting the packet loss since last time (ages ago) as I can still play online games without "obvious" hitches .. and waiting 30 extra seconds for some pages to load has become normal for me lol. |
Re: What download speed should i expect?
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If we're getting *really* pedantic kilobytes, megabytes, gigabytes indicate decimal quantities, not their binary equivalents kibibytes, mibibytes and gibibytes. Sorry if I've upset any programmers with that one but that's the way it is, officially apparently - see IETC: Quote:
I was just giving the pure unfettered bitrates, the performance I would recommend users to expect from their new services is as I posted, 120KiB/s for each 1Mbit of download speed, 12KiB/s for each 100k of upload speed. Anything else is a bonus! The joys of comparing transmission/communication rates with storage rates, telecomms vs IT at its' finest. |
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