bt and interleaved internet

Soldato
Joined
30 Aug 2006
Posts
2,682
my bt internet connection according to my homehub is interleaved , how do i turn this off as its giving me very bad ping times with my pc and xbox live , and why would my connection be interleaved anyway ?
 
here is my details can i get bt to remove the interleaved connection


Connection time 0 days, 0:01:20
Downstream 8,128 Kbps
Upstream 448 Kbps


ADSL settings
VPI/VCI 0/38
Type PPPoA
Modulation ITU-T G.992.1
Latency type Interleaved
Noise margin (Down/Up) 6.3 dB / 23.0 dB
Line attenuation (Down/Up) 36.0 dB / 21.0 dB
Output power (Down/Up) 19.8 dBm / 12.0 dBm
 
Phone them up and ask. It's enabled for stability reasons though the default is to have it disabled and automagically enable it if your connection becomes unstable.
 
yea if its unstable then interleaving can help.

your line stats look ok and i reckon u ccan get away with interleaving off.

my isp told me latency drops and sometimes streaming videos throughput can also increase.

GL tho
 
Interleaving basically resends every data packet, effectively doubling your ping and halving your download bandwidth.
 
Interleaving uses extra error correction which increases ping time - it does decrease bandwidth in some cases... but nothing like half... prolly not even 10% less throughput. Tho if you have extremely heavy packetloss you will see a massive speed dip.
 
Funny, most people have around 50% with interleaving.

Just in my experience anyways, not saying your wrong!
 
Thats probably because their lines are extremely noisey pulling down the sync speed they get with the appropriate SNR target.
 
50% of what though? If the connection's unstable or seeing high packet loss, it's 50% of nothing at all.
As Rroff suggested, it probably comes with an increased target SNR margin to improve stability yet more.
 
That isn't true at all. If you want to read about how interleaving works, you can read here.

Yep, like you have said he is totally wrong. Interleaved does not resend the packets and half your download bandwidth.

Suggest you read up on how ADSL technology works including the different modes.

Best way OP is to ring your ISP. BT i am unsure how flexable they are with changing modes but im sure they will do it if they look at the line stats.
 
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