Charles,
I've seen in the past where you have been helpful in explaining to folks with the HN9000 on checking if they had the correct version of the meter for their plan, if the software in their modem was the compatible version, if they were on the correct gateway, and if Hughes had set things on their end to make the meter operate correctly. Perhaps you could go through that with Lea to be sure everything is working together as it should?
Also note the properties on the image she posted. Could that cloud service have any bearing on the data being used up rapidly?
Ron
Lea,
To add to Charles comments about routers:
Having a router connected complicates troubleshooting in certain areas. A router allows the wired connection of additional computers possible so speed problems can develop if too many computers are active at the same time. Your Hughes connection is a shared resource and that includes devices on your LAN side.
Multiple computers also complicate investigating data loss issues as the loss may be caused by only a single computer.
The Big Complication however of having a router connected during troubleshooting lies with the routers wireless capabilities.
The wireless portion of the router can be open or encrypted.
If open, then any device that comes within range can quietly and unknowingly latch on to your network and consume data. Cell phones and "anything Apple" will grab on to a Wi-Fi signal in a heartbeat and get their updated. Your neighbor could come over to visit and have his/her cell phone in their pocket and it can latch on to your routers wireless signal and update.
Tablets and Ereaders are big offenders ... unless they are "hard off" they can and will awaken and perform update and "sync" function. The ability to truly control this activity is somewhere between limited and poor.
With your routers wireless channels encrypted using as an example one of these common methods:
WPA-PSK [TKIP]
WPA2-PSK [AES]
WPA-PSK [TKIP] + WPA2-PSK [AES]
this will limit connection to authorized devices only but they can still be very difficult to control.
Effective troubleshooting requires a single computer directly connected to the Modem. Having a router connected to the network during troubleshooting periods simply leaves to many "backdoor" avenues.
Another option of course is to learn how to access your routers internal user interface and learn the routers features and controls including how to turn on and off the router "radio".
That will, in one easily reversible "swipe" eliminate one entire "class" of potential problem avenues without disrupting a lot of cabling and so forth.
As an example, from my old Netgear WNR2000 user interface, the "wireless radio" portion of the router can be disabled/re-enabled by adding/removing the checkmark highlighted in this snip and "saving" the changes.