F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Networks Discussing wireless speed issues

Discussing wireless speed issues

Discussing wireless speed issues

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eggman722
Member
176
06-02-2016, 11:25 AM
#11
router set to Dlink GO RT N 150 laptop model is Lenovo G505 (quad core). My laptop is right next to the router, just a few centimeters away. There are two phones connected wirelessly, and one PC is linked through a cable to the router.
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eggman722
06-02-2016, 11:25 AM #11

router set to Dlink GO RT N 150 laptop model is Lenovo G505 (quad core). My laptop is right next to the router, just a few centimeters away. There are two phones connected wirelessly, and one PC is linked through a cable to the router.

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Lorentz4Ever
Member
176
06-02-2016, 07:35 PM
#12
The router supports communication with devices such as wireless network cards up to 150 mbps. This results in a theoretical maximum upload and download speed of 72 mbps each way. It’s a great setup, similar to positioning your modem and antenna close together—about an inch apart—with no other wireless signals nearby. So the card should establish a strong connection and maintain it at that speed.
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Lorentz4Ever
06-02-2016, 07:35 PM #12

The router supports communication with devices such as wireless network cards up to 150 mbps. This results in a theoretical maximum upload and download speed of 72 mbps each way. It’s a great setup, similar to positioning your modem and antenna close together—about an inch apart—with no other wireless signals nearby. So the card should establish a strong connection and maintain it at that speed.

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zLeoZiin
Senior Member
503
06-02-2016, 09:56 PM
#13
Several elements influence this situation, but often it's a connectivity problem. Likely, your internal Wi-Fi card is restricting the weaker Mbps. Even if the speed seems slow, it won't matter much unless you're frequently downloading or streaming in 4K. What truly determines a Wi-Fi user is frequent disconnections—if not, you're fine.
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zLeoZiin
06-02-2016, 09:56 PM #13

Several elements influence this situation, but often it's a connectivity problem. Likely, your internal Wi-Fi card is restricting the weaker Mbps. Even if the speed seems slow, it won't matter much unless you're frequently downloading or streaming in 4K. What truly determines a Wi-Fi user is frequent disconnections—if not, you're fine.

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