Forum Discussion
Slow speeds during peak hours
We really would be happy to help! There are a lot of ways you can improve the quality of your Hughesnet experience, but first we have to know what's going awry.
There is a bit of work at your end, starting with communication. If you don't reply or just give up, a moderator will close the thread and then we have to start all over again the next time.
Second, there will be series of tests you will need to perform, following the instructions to the letter. Yes, this can be a pain in the backside, but really it's not all that bad. Besides, a little inconvenience now surely would be worth it to resolve your speed issues, right?
And that's it! Just keep communicating with us and follow directions on testing. I'm sure we can get to the bottom of this.
Frankly, I doubt it's simply a matter of congestion since you seem to imply that it happens consistently, all day every day. It may be a partial explanation. But let's find out! In any event, we can get you answers, if you're willing to engage with us.
EDIT: If you do want help, please open a new thread in tech support. Thanks!
Sincerely,
Debbie
- supafly947 years agoFreshman
I think we have got off topic here. From what I understand from reading here the internet service during peak hours is slower because everyone is using it. I accept this. Back to my original question if hughes.net gets more customers wont that cause more congestion and slower speeds?
- maratsade7 years agoDistinguished Professor IV
It would, in time, but they manage the network as much as they can to prevent it, up to and including higher capacity satellites, as the technology advances and permits it.
Back to my original question if hughes.net gets more customers wont that cause more congestion and slower speeds?*I am not a Hughesnet employee or representative. This is a customer-to-customer tech support community, and I am a customer.
- MarkJFine7 years agoProfessor
maratsade wrote:It would, in time, but they manage the network as much as they can to prevent it, up to and including higher capacity satellites, as the technology advances and permits it.
Just to back that statement up, I've noticed this even on SDO68, where the number of routable gateway servers appeared to have increased not too long ago. Basically, what that does is reduce the addressable log jam at a particular gateway, provided the bandwidth going to the internet has also increased.
That's why rebooting the modem is the next best way to 'manually' re-associate it with a gateway and find an under-utilized server when it seems bogged down.
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