bcraig15 Posted December 12, 2004 CID Share Posted December 12, 2004 I had a post a while back about my internet being very slow compared to what was advertised. I am technically supposed to have 4000/1000 cable, but I get about 800/140 (max, usually lower). I called the ISP and they sent someone out and he was happy to get me to the 700-1000 range (it was even lower before.) I have noticed that my speed tends to be running fine for a while then bottom out HARD. Like in my FTP program I have a bandwidth monitor, and my file download would run aroun 100 kbps for a while then fall to 0 and rise back. When running a test here, the little progress bar animation will shoot out and go to maybe 40% then freeze, then shoot to 80%, freeze, and then complete. I have run the tests on other computers and they tend to display the bar at constant speed, etc. I am thinking I would have some decent internet speed if I could calm it down a little. One thing of interest I have found is that my ISP has the MTU set at 1420. Has anyone ever heard of this before, or know something I could try. Thanks for your help Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
VanBuren Posted December 12, 2004 CID Share Posted December 12, 2004 I had a post a while back about my internet being very slow compared to what was advertised. I am technically supposed to have 4000/1000 cable, but I get about 800/140 (max, usually lower). I called the ISP and they sent someone out and he was happy to get me to the 700-1000 range (it was even lower before.) I have noticed that my speed tends to be running fine for a while then bottom out HARD. Like in my FTP program I have a bandwidth monitor, and my file download would run aroun 100 Kbps for a while then fall to 0 and rise back. When running a test here, the little progress bar animation will shoot out and go to maybe 40% then freeze, then shoot to 80%, freeze, and then complete. I have run the tests on other computers and they tend to display the bar at constant speed, etc. I am thinking I would have some decent internet speed if I could calm it down a little. One thing of interest I have found is that my ISP has the MTU set at 1420. Has anyone ever heard of this before, or know something I could try. Thanks for your help hey bcraig I dont tweaks will solve all your problems, but start here powercycle your modem, leave it off for 30 seconds and then plug it in again follow this guide, http://www.testmy.net/forumz/viewtopic.php?t=605 also make a tracert against testmy.net start-run type cmd and hit enter type tracert testmy.net and hit enter right click and copy all and paste it here so we can see it. if you have Cablenut installed, you can try this file i made for MTU 1420 good luck VanBuren Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
The Reverend Posted December 12, 2004 CID Share Posted December 12, 2004 The Internet STANDARD MTU is 1500 ...period. There are dozens of reasons that ISPs will grab lower numbers, (depends on what 'nix' systems they are running for T-1s or whatever they have. YOU should keep your settings at 1500, because "the backbone" of the entire web is built around an MTU value of 1500. (But there are tons of computers that do better with varying numbers ...that's because there are tons of forces 'at play' which influence the behavior of MTU values and how the router "perceives" them, your Ethernet card "sees" them, and how your system board will handle them. No two are alike ...even two identical motherboards will perform radically differently. Most likely their systems will 'default' to 1500 when it is being 'forced', otherwise they can play with a lesser value for too many reasons to list (and there is far too much misinformation out there to make much sense of it). Road Runner won't tell you the truth, but when I lived in Florida they gave me speeds unlike I will most likely never see again. (They were using 1480 at the time, but it would 'default' to the forced 1500 'on demand'. It isn't really worthy of a 2nd thought. I'd look elsewhere for an answer to such strange behavior. Have you tried swapping out your Ethernet Card with another? Checked your CAT-5 cable or swap it out too? Or, is the Ethernet Card "seated" (with good, clean contacts in its slot)? Clean contacts make for HUGE differences ...that goes double for CPUs and DDR! Cheers! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
VanBuren Posted December 12, 2004 CID Share Posted December 12, 2004 ive see alot of ppl with MTU in a range from 1400-1500 Windows XP, 2k and win 98 se and win ME, has by defult Path MTU detection activated, and that means windows will find it for you. If your ISP has locked your MTU to 1400 there is no way to "overide" it. The result will only be fragmated packages and alot slower speed. The diffrence in speed between a MTU of 1400 and 1500 is almost nothing. VanBuren Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bcraig15 Posted December 13, 2004 Author CID Share Posted December 13, 2004 Thanks for you help so far. I have tried to change the MTU through the registry and with tweak programs but it always reverts back to 1420. I tried to cycle the modem and I will try to swap the cable in the next few days or so. I have an on-board LAN port, but it and the cable seems in good shape. I tried the cablenuts settings, and it seems to be about the same so far, but I will keep fiddling with it. Here is my tracert to testmy [code:1] C:>tracert testmy.net Tracing route to testmy.net [67.19.36.6] over a maximum of 30 hops: 1 16 ms 6 ms 5 ms 172.16.66.1 2 7 ms 6 ms 7 ms 128.163.252.1 3 7 ms 25 ms 6 ms uky-mdc-h1-1.net.uky.edu [128.163.55.65] 4 31 ms 8 ms 7 ms 128.163.55.46 5 21 ms 18 ms 19 ms atl-edge-19.inet.qwest.net [65.114.1.13] 6 19 ms 20 ms 21 ms atl-core-03.inet.qwest.net [205.171.21.125] 7 21 ms 21 ms 34 ms atl-core-01.inet.qwest.net [205.171.21.153] 8 38 ms 60 ms 42 ms iah-core-03.inet.qwest.net [205.171.8.145] 9 48 ms 38 ms 48 ms iah-core-02.inet.qwest.net [205.171.31.41] 10 44 ms 44 ms 46 ms dal-core-01.inet.qwest.net [205.171.8.125] 11 42 ms 43 ms 40 ms dal-core-03.inet.qwest.net [205.171.25.134] 12 55 ms 43 ms 42 ms dax-edge-01.inet.qwest.net [205.171.25.162] 13 59 ms 42 ms 42 ms 65.118.50.202 14 45 ms 43 ms 44 ms 216.140.5.45 15 42 ms 42 ms 45 ms 67.99.43.234 16 45 ms 109 ms 44 ms dist-vlan32.dsr3-1.dllstx3.theplanet.com [70.85. 127.61] 17 44 ms 43 ms 59 ms dist-vlan21.dsr1-1.dllstx2.theplanet.com [70.85. 127.67] 18 44 ms 54 ms 45 ms dsr2-2-v2.dllstx4.theplanet.com [12.96.160.40] 19 49 ms 44 ms 63 ms gig1-0-2.tp-car9-2.dllstx4.theplanet.com [67.18. 116.86] 20 70 ms 45 ms 60 ms 6.67-19-36.reverse.theplanet.com [67.19.36.6] Trace complete. C:> [/code:1] Thanks again. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RTB Posted December 13, 2004 CID Share Posted December 13, 2004 Nothing really abnormal, but there are a number of ping spikes on that tracert, which means your connection isn't that stable. Good luck... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
VanBuren Posted December 13, 2004 CID Share Posted December 13, 2004 hey again bcraig, like RTB said trace is nothing abnormal just some spikes, do you have a router? If so unplug it and hook up your pc directly against modem and try speed again, and also a new tracert. VanBuren Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bcraig15 Posted December 14, 2004 Author CID Share Posted December 14, 2004 yeah, I ran a ping with 20 cycles, and most numbers were around 40-50 but there were some every once in a while that went over 100. I figure I just have a very unstable connection like you guys said. I am on IM alot and it drops and has to reconnect. My router is built into the modem. One thing I noticed was that the router/modem is only connected at 10mbps. It is a pretty old piece of hardware, but I really don't have a choice. Do you think the router/modem could be bad and cause the spikes? Thanks for your help! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
VanBuren Posted December 14, 2004 CID Share Posted December 14, 2004 yeah' date=' I ran a ping with 20 cycles, and most numbers were around 40-50 but there were some every once in a while that went over 100. I figure I just have a very unstable connection like you guys said. I am on IM alot and it drops and has to reconnect. My router is built into the modem. One thing I noticed was that the router/modem is only connected at 10mbps. It is a pretty old piece of hardware, but I really don't have a choice. Do you think the router/modem could be bad and cause the spikes? Thanks for your help![/quote'] I dont think it matters if your connected at 10 or 100 Mbps against modem. It might be your modem/router that make these slowdowns. borrow a modem from a friend or ask your ISP if they have a modem you can try with. good luck VanBuren Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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