F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Networks downloads limited to 10MB per second

downloads limited to 10MB per second

downloads limited to 10MB per second

Z
zebedy2014
Junior Member
5
10-04-2016, 03:50 AM
#1
Hello. It seems your downloads are limited to 10MB per second, even though you're using an Ethernet connection. On Speedtest by Ookla, both download and upload speeds show 90Mbps, which is below the cable's maximum of 100Mbps. You might want to check your network settings or contact your ISP to see if there are any restrictions or configurations affecting performance.
Z
zebedy2014
10-04-2016, 03:50 AM #1

Hello. It seems your downloads are limited to 10MB per second, even though you're using an Ethernet connection. On Speedtest by Ookla, both download and upload speeds show 90Mbps, which is below the cable's maximum of 100Mbps. You might want to check your network settings or contact your ISP to see if there are any restrictions or configurations affecting performance.

H
Hypocat
Member
59
10-11-2016, 06:27 PM
#2
For downloading at 100MB/s, a 1Gbps link is required. At 90Mbps it equals approximately 10MB/s.
H
Hypocat
10-11-2016, 06:27 PM #2

For downloading at 100MB/s, a 1Gbps link is required. At 90Mbps it equals approximately 10MB/s.

D
Disco_Master
Member
163
10-17-2016, 12:48 PM
#3
Mega bits and mega bytes are distinct measurements. (One byte holds eight bits.) Sizes are shown in megabytes, yet web speeds are listed in megabits since larger numbers signal better performance in marketing. A rate of 10 MB per second corresponds to roughly 80 Mb per second, matching your plan's capacity. (Your download speed is slightly higher than this due to additional network overhead.) For increased velocity, you must upgrade to a faster service from your provider.
D
Disco_Master
10-17-2016, 12:48 PM #3

Mega bits and mega bytes are distinct measurements. (One byte holds eight bits.) Sizes are shown in megabytes, yet web speeds are listed in megabits since larger numbers signal better performance in marketing. A rate of 10 MB per second corresponds to roughly 80 Mb per second, matching your plan's capacity. (Your download speed is slightly higher than this due to additional network overhead.) For increased velocity, you must upgrade to a faster service from your provider.

Y
YellowCurry
Junior Member
10
10-17-2016, 01:33 PM
#4
1 Megabit per second equals 0.125 megabytes per second. Multiply 90 Mb by 0.125 MB, which gives 11.25 MB. Subtract 10% for extra overhead, resulting in 10.125 MB. Therefore, your ideal download speed should be near 10.125 MBps.
Y
YellowCurry
10-17-2016, 01:33 PM #4

1 Megabit per second equals 0.125 megabytes per second. Multiply 90 Mb by 0.125 MB, which gives 11.25 MB. Subtract 10% for extra overhead, resulting in 10.125 MB. Therefore, your ideal download speed should be near 10.125 MBps.

M
monstercd
Junior Member
14
10-17-2016, 05:00 PM
#5
I understand this conspiracy theory sounds intriguing, but networking has always been about bits. File sizes are usually given in Mebibytes or GiB, not the common MiB or GiB names. Storage units like megabytes and gigabytes don’t match up with the technical terms. Plus, formatting details can make huge storage appear much smaller—like a 12TB drive holding only about 10.84TiB of data.
M
monstercd
10-17-2016, 05:00 PM #5

I understand this conspiracy theory sounds intriguing, but networking has always been about bits. File sizes are usually given in Mebibytes or GiB, not the common MiB or GiB names. Storage units like megabytes and gigabytes don’t match up with the technical terms. Plus, formatting details can make huge storage appear much smaller—like a 12TB drive holding only about 10.84TiB of data.

G
GoldMegaMan
Junior Member
23
10-18-2016, 01:37 AM
#6
Absolutely, this concept is firmly rooted and unlikely to shift. Yet I felt compelled to highlight the idea that a larger number often signals a higher quality! In essence, technology revolves around this principle.
G
GoldMegaMan
10-18-2016, 01:37 AM #6

Absolutely, this concept is firmly rooted and unlikely to shift. Yet I felt compelled to highlight the idea that a larger number often signals a higher quality! In essence, technology revolves around this principle.