Last night DL was consistently under 1 mbps, up was 2.5 to 4 This morning, DL has ranged from sub 1 to 10. I have been on 4 chats and they just stop replying or disconnect. One rebooted modem a fe...
Thank you for this information. I also noticed on your account that you've reached out to our corporate office, so yes, one of our corporate representatives will be in contact with you to address your concerns. I've shared this thread with him so that he has more details on the troubleshooting attempted thus far. I'll go ahead and close out this thread, as I'm sure our rep will provide you with a resolution.
The first 5 digits are a numeric code representing the most recent past hour. The next 5 digits are for one hour back, and the next 5 digits after that are for two hours back. The final digit is some kind of a checksum.
To decode these, reposition the dashes in the code like this:
0000-0000-0000-0005 -> 00000-00000-00000-5
Each group of five digits is the status for 1 hour with the following number values matching up with the display in the above screen:
2 Downlink
4 Uplink
16 Association
32 TCP Acceleration
128 RTT
512 FAP
1024 Web Acceleration [N]
2048 DNS Acceleration [N]
4096 DNS Acceleration [I]
I don't know what the values for LAN and Inroute Protection are -- I don't remember seeing them, but maybe 8192, and 16384. There may be more code values not shown in the display as 1, 8, 64, and 256 are obviously missing and may represent something. If anyone knows, please let me know!
For example 3 hours of FAP without anything else would have a code like this: 00512-00512-00512 (shown as 0051-2005-1200-512x, where x is some digit for the checksum)
A value of 00000-00000-00020 (shown as 0000-0000-0000-020x) means that Uplink+Association in the last hour with the two hours before being good as 4=Uplink + 16=Association gives 20 for both Uplink and Association.
If you see the diagnostic code was 0000-0000-0000-0005 then your last 3 hours would show in the display like mine above.
Unfortunately, WiFi can give really bad performance if another WiFi hotspot is in range using an over-lapping channel. I experimented setting up two WiFi in range of each other purposely setting over lapping channels and the result is sub 800 Kbps at best!
Also certain devices don't seem to play by the WiFi rules nicely - my niece had a certain older phone that would cause all other devices to drop off/rejoin anytime it joined the WiFi. If she then let it sit for a while, all devices would again drop off and rejoin after so many minutes and the process would repeat the moment she touched it making it squak something over the WiFi. When the devices dropped/rejoined, some would have trouble getting back on making a huge pain. I have only seen two devices like this, but I think both may have been made in 2008 or 2009 and they made using WiFi a nightmare when they were turned on.
Your mentioning of the low speed reminded me of that over lapping channel thing or interference, but don't discount there being a rogue device -- the only way I could find them was to be sure that all devices were powered off -- not just screen dark but actually powered off, and testing each device with one other device on to find the trouble maker. This is a huge pain since there were a ton of devices here using WiFi.
Many of the folks here requests tests using wired connection to side step the complex trouble shooting of WiFi problems.
Thanks for the amazing reply! Yes, I normally wouldn't trust wifi at all but we are super isolated and there are only 3 devices in the house. Even with that, I am going to test today via ethernet. I checked my wifi analyzer app and there are three unnamed wifi networks that appear to originate from the router based on signal strength. No idea what they are or why they are lol.
Really should only be two which are hidden and only for use in conjunction with the booster. the reason they are hidden is so only the booster will recognize it so no one accidentally tries to connect to it.