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Forum Discussion
rguy1
Apr 08, 2016Aspirant
Internet speed and Router settings -
You ever feel like the cable companies should be playing carnicval music - The cable company was giving me extreme speed and I was only getting 20 mps when I should of been getting 30 or better - They said it was the modem and sent me one - A direct ethernet connection to the modem produced at about 38 mpbs - My wireless which they so kindly deleted for me only produces about 18 to 20 - and etc .... .Of course saving it was easy once I got over the intial holy crap portion of my evening - Any hoot - They think it's in the router settings - I'm lost
I've set my speed at 54 - which should be high enough - I have like 150 and 300 or something - They gave me a modem address password and username from the address on the new modem but since I recovered my old setting I didn't change anything - Seems like the cable company could help to set these settings but gotta come here and ask - Can any one help me or steer me in the right direction to help my routers performance - I should be doing much better than 20 mps -
I have a N3000 Wireless Router
WNR20000V3
updated today - 4/7/16/ V1.1.2.12
That is good idea. Starting from fresh to make sure. When you reset the router, push and hold the button until light
blinks and starts flashing, then release the button.
15 Replies
Wi-Fi is kinda like a car. There's engine horsepower (power delivered to the crankshaft) and then there's wheel horsepower (power delivered to the wheels after parisitic losses from the transmission and attached accessories). The Wi-Fi speed settings you see on a router are like engine horsepower. The actual rate of transfer of the data that really matters (i.e. your video stream, web pages, computer files) is like wheel horsepower.
Setting your Wi-Fi speed to 54 Mbps is going to result in actual speeds of around 20 Mbps to 23 Mbps, which is pretty much what you are seeing. Very seldomly should you ever set the Wi-Fi speed on the router to a setting lower than the maximum speed. So go back and crank it back up to the max.
If you are still seeing 20 Mbps after you do this, then there may be other issues. The Wi-Fi channel could be too congested, so you could change it to another channel. Or your device doesn't have the latest Wi-Fi technology. Or it's too far away from the router. Or there are too many walls in the way. Or there is radio interference from cordless telephones, microwave ovens, baby monitors or anything that spews radio noise in the Wi-Fi spectrum. You may have to systematically eliminate each of those sources until your speeds climb.
- rguy1Aspirant
Thanks for your response - My current setting was at WPA2-PSK { TKIP } and at 54 mbps - So I changed it to WPA2-PSK { AES } at 300 mbps
Through that process I was prompted that this change would move my router out of G speed and into N speed etc .....
So - Then I got another prompt warning me that even if I selecected the 150 mbps speed my computer could drop to 20 hz and that generally occured to 65 mbps performance per wi allowance guidelines for 40 and 20 Hz performance -
I snipped the dialog box but I don't see an attachment segment - So any hoot - It cut me off from the internet and wouldn't let me sign in my security code to connect - It just prompted I could not connect - So I re hooked up the ethernet - reset everything to how it was before and it's working just fine -
I know I have to be allowed to use the N settings because it's a N router but their may other restrictions on my computer , cable or settings I'm not aware off - ugh - Netgear set these setting up when I bought the roughter years ago - So maybe your know what I should do - The cable company uses G routers and theirs know way their faster than my N router - any ideas -
What is the brand and model number of the Wi-Fi adapter in your computer? It could be an 802.11g adapter, which is limited to 54 Mbps. You would need to upgrade it with something newer to get more than 20 Mbps of throughput.
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