Quote:
Originally Posted by Sephiroth
I don't think so, Roughie. In the older days when we were on 200 Meg, for example, we were all getting well in excess of that. Those who were on 500 Meg were reporting 540 Meg. This both in router mode and modem mode.
What seems to be perplexing you is why can't you go all the way to 1 Gbps. With a bit of thought, you could lash up two computers on the same LAN and perform a huge file transfer and then time it (there must be some software to do this somewhere).
Addressing the latency question, it's quite complicated. The LAN ports are buffered - which is a mitigation against latency. So latency could then depend on what else is happening in target equipment - like sending ACKs back to the data source. That said, speeds tests don't require ACKs. But through the AX1100 LAN port, other stuff in the background might be doing things like looking for emails or whatever. That will steal bandwidth.
Do you have an AX capabvle mobile and if so, what speed test speed do you get when every other app is dormant?
|
I'm not sure that the overclocking that VM does in its modem config, to allow for overheads, applies here, if the absolute ceiling of a 1 Gig port is 1 Gig.
My phone is a Samsung Galaxy S10 Plus. I've been getting something like 850Mb on the 5G-2 channel, but without putting other apps to sleep. I just now got 929Mb after a reboot. Experimentation required.
I might try what you suggest regarding hitching up two PCs to a single Erthernet port, (The 2.5Gb one.), just as a challenge. However, when one gets 948Mb consistently, I don't suppose missing the extra 52Mb matters much. A free boost to 100Mb upstream would be handy though.
I know, that is probably a long way off, given VM's network architecture.