F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Networks It's common for Wi-Fi cards to experience slight packet loss, especially under heavy usage or in less stable networks.

It's common for Wi-Fi cards to experience slight packet loss, especially under heavy usage or in less stable networks.

It's common for Wi-Fi cards to experience slight packet loss, especially under heavy usage or in less stable networks.

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eskzz
Posting Freak
909
02-17-2023, 12:28 AM
#1
It's common for Wi-Fi cards to experience slight packet loss compared to a stable LAN connection. The difference in performance can depend on various factors like distance, interference, and network congestion. Your setup seems to show better stability over the internet, which is typical.
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eskzz
02-17-2023, 12:28 AM #1

It's common for Wi-Fi cards to experience slight packet loss compared to a stable LAN connection. The difference in performance can depend on various factors like distance, interference, and network congestion. Your setup seems to show better stability over the internet, which is typical.

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SkullyRoger
Member
147
02-19-2023, 08:27 AM
#2
It could come down to signal integrity. If it's weak it's expected that you could experience some packet loss. What you use the computer for depends on if that will impact you severely or not.
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SkullyRoger
02-19-2023, 08:27 AM #2

It could come down to signal integrity. If it's weak it's expected that you could experience some packet loss. What you use the computer for depends on if that will impact you severely or not.

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Pimousse62620
Member
234
02-19-2023, 03:36 PM
#3
No, I don't live in an apartment building.
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Pimousse62620
02-19-2023, 03:36 PM #3

No, I don't live in an apartment building.

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SiphonicVirus
Member
201
03-10-2023, 11:31 AM
#4
Normal packet loss near 1% in your home is typical with a premium router. Increased loss could stem from your Wi-Fi card, router, or internet service provider.
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SiphonicVirus
03-10-2023, 11:31 AM #4

Normal packet loss near 1% in your home is typical with a premium router. Increased loss could stem from your Wi-Fi card, router, or internet service provider.