From what I have read, cable appears to be MUCH more reliable and faster than anything supplied over BT lines and as such, comparisons are pretty meaningless.You shouldn't loose that much, I get 19.5mb down and 0.72 upload from my 20mb cable connection through the supplied D-Link router![]()
You shouldn't loose that much, I get 19.5mb down and 0.72 upload from my 20mb cable connection through the supplied D-Link router![]()
Speedtest.net:
Download 5,809 kb/s
Upload 484 kb/s
Ping 19ms
Netgear:
Downstream: 6,872 - kbps Line Att'n 39.5 db - Noise margin 8.7 db
Upstream: 947 kbps - kbps Line Att'n 17.5 db - Noise margin 6.0 db
Thanks for that advice; I'm not entirely sure that I understand it all but at the very least, it has encouraged me to look at ThinkBroadband.Well for adsl2+ you really want a broadcom chip, this plus that fact that the gt is more powerful than the standard dgs is why it's so popular. The fact it holds connection where other routers can't/won't makes it the preferred router. For adsl2+ isps will tell you to avoid the v5 and get a gt, that belkin 7633 however should be fine on adsl2+.
I'm on be with 39/21.1db with an snr of 3db and get 13.1 sync, on a 6db profile i get 11.5 (10.5 throughput) and 9 i get 10. That belkin should be achieving similar, the v5 simply wontIt looks like you're on 9bd but without more detailed line stats i.e. error count (fec, crc etc.) which i don't know if you can get from the belkin, you can't rule out a poor line.
In any case, congested servers coupled with small files don't give speedtest.net the most accurate results, use the think broadband test files to get a better view of your throughput (larger the better)
Same here so far as my ISP is concerned, nearly migrated away until I realised that it was the fault of my NETGEAR DG834Gv5 Modem/RouterNever been a fan of Netgear myself, i was playing hell with my ISP until i realised it was the router's fault
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Thanks for that.I realise netgear brand the v5 as an adsl2+ modem but it can't deal with annex m (only a) because it uses a Conexant chip-set rather than Broadcom. The routers Be/O2 issue may be basic, but they're Broadcom based for a reason...
Any alternative suggestions?
So, not Draytek 2820vn's thenAnnex M (I believe) does only affect upload speeds. It's common for routers not to support this.
Sometimes using different chipsets in your router from that in the DSLAMs can give you worse speeds (i.e. from moving from our BeBox's to our Draytek 2820vn's in each office, we expect to lose 2-3Mbs)