1.6 GB UK download size
1.6 GB UK download size
Hi Please help me. I have an 1.6 gb internet connection equally 200mb/s. i run in a problem i can get this max speeds only with battle net or steam. when i download true qbittorrent speed is bottle neck in 120 ,140 rarely reach 170 mb/s and some random 1 sec freezing off screen. Tried different torrents with 100+peers. Tried on nvme and hdd same result. Cpu 7800x3d Gpu xtx radeon nvme 4 tb seagate 24 tb and some small nvme’s 2 and 1 tb.
1.6 gigabits per second equals roughly 200 megabytes per second, which is possible. Also, 140 megabytes per second comes close to 1 gigabit per second—do you have a network connection (computer, cable, gateway/switch) with at least 2.5 gbps?
Connect the router's wire link to your PC using a 2.5 Gbps port.
Bittorrent depends on upload speeds. Many ISPs offer asymmetrical plans like yours. Still, some users have extremely high uploads. Docsis Cable and DSL connections usually provide limited upload speeds. On my end, with a Docsis cable, my upload reaches 20 Mbps, while the fastest available in my area is about 40 Mbps on certain plans. In parts of the US, ISPs can reach up to 300 Mbps, but only in upgraded zones and this is relatively recent. If you hit your upload limit, it can affect the whole connection. Without sufficient upload, you can't send requests effectively. It’s possible that many users are restricting their clients’ upload rates as well. This isn’t just about ISPs—it could be backend providers limiting bandwidth because network capacity has limits. Most residential ISPs tend to overuse their networks. My ISP has been known to throttle BitTorrent connections before; they understand it’s often used for piracy.
This verifies you're reaching maximum performance with the system. Delays in downloads stem from the remote server limiting the data transfer rate.
This means you need to cancel the current contract within 14 days and return to a 1GB connection without extra charges. You mentioned using a broadband company router and adjusting settings, like changing a port forward rule that was blocking QTorrent traffic. After fixing the port, the connection remained unstable. Essentially, you're trying to fix network access issues by managing router ports and speed settings.
The issue lies with the source server, not your setup. Make sure your torrent client displays speeds in Mbps rather than MBps.
The speed is tracked in Mega Bytes per second. With a 1600 Mega bits per second link, the rate equals 200 MegaBytes per second. No issues here.