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Forum Discussion
leigh_
Nov 19, 2022Aspirant
Intermittent internet speed with Netgear CM500 Modem
Hi all, I've been having major internet issues for the last month or so, using a Netgear CM500 modem with a TP-Link AX50 on a Cox plan (100 Mbps down / 3 Mbps up). During the day, everything's fine, ...
Kitsap
Nov 19, 2022Master
leigh_ wrote:Hi all, I've been having major internet issues for the last month or so, using a Netgear CM500 modem with a TP-Link AX50 on a Cox plan (100 Mbps down / 3 Mbps up). During the day, everything's fine, with no connectivity or speed issues, but from around 6pm - midnight, the internet is unusable: the connection is intermittent and insanely slow (like 1-2 mbps DOWN / .07 mbps UP).My ISP has sent a tech out twice now, but each time, they've found no line or signal issues, and my connection looked fine (at the time). The second guy replaced some old fittings/connections at the box, and said the problem was related to issues with the node in our area, but even with no local outages reported, the problems are obviously still there.Looking for suggestions on what to do next. Did the ISP techs miss something, is my modem defective, or could my ISP be throttling my connection during peak/evening hours? Thanks.Also, I've attached screenshots of my modem connection and event log.
What the line tech may not have clearly revealed is that the problems at the node are due to your ISP over-subscribing the number of customers connected to the node. Too many users sharing the data connection during peak usage times. The only way that gets resolved is if the ISP adds new infrastructure to provide additional nodes.
The line issues should be corrected, but do not hold out hope that their correction will resolve the congestion issues on your node.
Your CM500 is a DOCSIS 3.0 device. I do not know if your ISP is in the process of converting your local system over to DOCSIS 3.1. Your DOCSIS 3.0 modem should work fine for a 100/3 data plan.
leigh_
Nov 19, 2022Aspirant
I see. So even if there *are* line issues and they get fixed, there's no guarantee that will improve my connection.
And when I contact Cox again about the line issues, should I just request that the tech check *both* their wiring and the house/apartment wiring? I want the third visit to be the last one... Thanks guys!
- KitsapNov 20, 2022Master
leigh_ wrote:I see. So even if there *are* line issues and they get fixed, there's no guarantee that will improve my connection.
And when I contact Cox again about the line issues, should I just request that the tech check *both* their wiring and the house/apartment wiring? I want the third visit to be the last one... Thanks guys!
Make sure you understand who the ISP is going to charge for the "house/apartment wiring" check.
- leigh_Nov 20, 2022Aspirant
Cox makes it clear that the customer pays for any issues found inside the house, and not due to their equipment or line issues.
So...maybe my best bet is to wait until the problem happens again, then call customer support and escalate it until I get a tier 2/3 rep who has a 360-view with all the data and tools to diagnose the problem, live. Otherwise, another tech will just waste my time and money.