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Forum Discussion
idobsyn
Jul 15, 2022Aspirant
A7000 USB Adaptor Gets Lower Than Expected UL and DL MBPS in 5GHZ Range
According to the product description "This AC1900 USB 3.0 adapter wirelessly connects your laptop or desktop computer with WiFi speeds up to 1.9Gbps." However, after increasing my Hyperoptic broadban...
- Jul 18, 2022
idobsyn wrote:
Based on what you've said, it seems clear you feel the issue is separate to the adaptor itself as other users can pull much higher numbers on this device.
Not really. I am just suggesting that networks are complicated issues and that it can take some effort to track down issues. And, of course, you have to cut through the fig of marketing when it comes to talk of speeds.
A good way to test a USB adapter is to try it in different devices and on different wifi sources.
Of course, if you have real problems with speeds on your network, the obvious answer is to replace wifi with a wired connection. Something like Powerline Ethernet might be an improvement.
idobsyn
Jul 17, 2022Aspirant
Thanks for your thoughts and suggestions, Michael.
I'm really looking at the numbers because when I pay for a specific level of service, I expect to be able to get that (or in the case of broadband, something which is as close to it as possible given my system's configuration).
Regards your driver comments, I've tried to update USB drivers but I always seem to get the stock message that they're at the latest level so I'm at a bit of a dead end there, I think. And without really digging into the chipsets and the like, I'm not confident I'll ever get to the bottom of this issue.
Based on what you've said, it seems clear you feel the issue is separate to the adaptor itself as other users can pull much higher numbers on this device. As I've alluded to above, I think I'll end up down the rabbit-hole trying to solve this so I'm just going to give up and go back to 250mbps.
Many thanks.
michaelkenward
Jul 18, 2022Guru - Experienced User
idobsyn wrote:
Based on what you've said, it seems clear you feel the issue is separate to the adaptor itself as other users can pull much higher numbers on this device.
Not really. I am just suggesting that networks are complicated issues and that it can take some effort to track down issues. And, of course, you have to cut through the fig of marketing when it comes to talk of speeds.
A good way to test a USB adapter is to try it in different devices and on different wifi sources.
Of course, if you have real problems with speeds on your network, the obvious answer is to replace wifi with a wired connection. Something like Powerline Ethernet might be an improvement.