F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Networks LAN connections can offer faster performance than internet speeds in certain scenarios.

LAN connections can offer faster performance than internet speeds in certain scenarios.

LAN connections can offer faster performance than internet speeds in certain scenarios.

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T
Tera_Byte
Member
57
11-26-2024, 08:36 PM
#1
Hey everyone, I recently purchased a decent Powerline kit because I couldn’t connect my computer directly via Ethernet. I tested my local setup and found that the bottleneck was my NAS, which caps performance around 200Mb/s. It’s more stable now, which is a positive sign. However, speed tests show downloads of 60-70Mb/s and uploads of 20-30Mb/s on a 100/40 connection—something I can achieve with WiFi. I suspect the limitation isn’t just from the wiring but possibly from the overall network setup. Using WiFi for file transfers has always been slow, around 1MB/s, and even multiple files drop to about 500KB/s. Now it seems like the whole internet connection is affected, not just my device. I didn’t expect a direct LAN connection to boost speeds so much; I thought it would help but instead caused issues. The NAS only reached about 3MB/s over the internet, which is far below what I hoped. I haven’t encountered this problem with other tools like torrent clients, and I’m unsure where the problem really lies. Any advice or insights would be greatly appreciated. Thanks!
T
Tera_Byte
11-26-2024, 08:36 PM #1

Hey everyone, I recently purchased a decent Powerline kit because I couldn’t connect my computer directly via Ethernet. I tested my local setup and found that the bottleneck was my NAS, which caps performance around 200Mb/s. It’s more stable now, which is a positive sign. However, speed tests show downloads of 60-70Mb/s and uploads of 20-30Mb/s on a 100/40 connection—something I can achieve with WiFi. I suspect the limitation isn’t just from the wiring but possibly from the overall network setup. Using WiFi for file transfers has always been slow, around 1MB/s, and even multiple files drop to about 500KB/s. Now it seems like the whole internet connection is affected, not just my device. I didn’t expect a direct LAN connection to boost speeds so much; I thought it would help but instead caused issues. The NAS only reached about 3MB/s over the internet, which is far below what I hoped. I haven’t encountered this problem with other tools like torrent clients, and I’m unsure where the problem really lies. Any advice or insights would be greatly appreciated. Thanks!

A
103
11-26-2024, 08:36 PM
#2
You're using a Powerline kit with Ethernet ports at 100Mbps.
A
AvulcanLogic00
11-26-2024, 08:36 PM #2

You're using a Powerline kit with Ethernet ports at 100Mbps.

A
angelzer0
Junior Member
10
11-26-2024, 08:36 PM
#3
It's a TP-Link AV1200 Gigabit set-up. I made sure to choose one with gigabit ports. I can reach more than 100Mb/s on my local network—about 200Mb/s seems to be my current limit, though that’s likely because of storage issues. On the internet, I get around 70/30 when the connection is 100/40 Mbps. I maintain a steady 100/40 using 5GHz WiFi.
A
angelzer0
11-26-2024, 08:36 PM #3

It's a TP-Link AV1200 Gigabit set-up. I made sure to choose one with gigabit ports. I can reach more than 100Mb/s on my local network—about 200Mb/s seems to be my current limit, though that’s likely because of storage issues. On the internet, I get around 70/30 when the connection is 100/40 Mbps. I maintain a steady 100/40 using 5GHz WiFi.

I
iSenpaiKitty
Member
197
11-26-2024, 08:36 PM
#4
Sure, just confirming.
Hmm, that does sound a bit unusual.
I
iSenpaiKitty
11-26-2024, 08:36 PM #4

Sure, just confirming.
Hmm, that does sound a bit unusual.

C
CoGro
Junior Member
2
11-26-2024, 08:36 PM
#5
It's strange, isn't it? I could reach speeds around 100Mb/s locally, yet my internet feels much slower than WiFi. It doesn’t seem like the powerline connections are the issue since the local network works properly.
C
CoGro
11-26-2024, 08:36 PM #5

It's strange, isn't it? I could reach speeds around 100Mb/s locally, yet my internet feels much slower than WiFi. It doesn’t seem like the powerline connections are the issue since the local network works properly.

S
superjustus8
Junior Member
48
11-26-2024, 08:36 PM
#6
Yes, the nas is linked to the same switch as the powerline, correct?
S
superjustus8
11-26-2024, 08:36 PM #6

Yes, the nas is linked to the same switch as the powerline, correct?

E
Evachadre
Junior Member
43
11-26-2024, 08:36 PM
#7
Sure, I should confirm the details match what you said. I ran a test before purchasing the adapter to check for a wired option, and it performed much better. I may repeat the test now to ensure everything remains stable.
E
Evachadre
11-26-2024, 08:36 PM #7

Sure, I should confirm the details match what you said. I ran a test before purchasing the adapter to check for a wired option, and it performed much better. I may repeat the test now to ensure everything remains stable.

K
Killemandrun
Member
162
11-26-2024, 08:36 PM
#8
There are alternative Ethernet options available.
K
Killemandrun
11-26-2024, 08:36 PM #8

There are alternative Ethernet options available.

S
sniperslapboss
Junior Member
16
11-26-2024, 08:36 PM
#9
It would impact everything, wouldn't it? Or if the Ethernet link to the NAS wasn't reliable, that's where the slowdowns would come from, but that isn't the case.
S
sniperslapboss
11-26-2024, 08:36 PM #9

It would impact everything, wouldn't it? Or if the Ethernet link to the NAS wasn't reliable, that's where the slowdowns would come from, but that isn't the case.

M
MadReaper02
Member
210
11-26-2024, 08:36 PM
#10
Do you think signals are being sent through the powerline cable to nearby devices?
M
MadReaper02
11-26-2024, 08:36 PM #10

Do you think signals are being sent through the powerline cable to nearby devices?

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