F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Networks Yes, it's normal.

Yes, it's normal.

Yes, it's normal.

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snipsnap27
Member
123
02-18-2016, 05:37 AM
#1
Your fiber link with a 150/150 plan from Frontier usually performs well, but noticeable spikes in latency can occur under heavy load. A ping time of 9–10 ms is typical, while 110–150 ms is more common during peak usage. This variation is normal depending on network conditions and traffic patterns.
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snipsnap27
02-18-2016, 05:37 AM #1

Your fiber link with a 150/150 plan from Frontier usually performs well, but noticeable spikes in latency can occur under heavy load. A ping time of 9–10 ms is typical, while 110–150 ms is more common during peak usage. This variation is normal depending on network conditions and traffic patterns.

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TheGrounders
Junior Member
14
02-24-2016, 10:16 PM
#2
Have you explored different IP addresses? It might just be the particular one in question. It doesn’t seem unusual for a network under stress to perform worse than one not under load, even though it’s noticeably slower. Consider running additional tests with other IPs.
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TheGrounders
02-24-2016, 10:16 PM #2

Have you explored different IP addresses? It might just be the particular one in question. It doesn’t seem unusual for a network under stress to perform worse than one not under load, even though it’s noticeably slower. Consider running additional tests with other IPs.

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_Altron_
Junior Member
34
02-25-2016, 05:04 AM
#3
appears to be a sluggish network connection.
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_Altron_
02-25-2016, 05:04 AM #3

appears to be a sluggish network connection.

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iTzPandaNuss
Member
144
02-25-2016, 07:04 AM
#4
Everyone seems confused about the topic. Increasing your connection speed will cause delays because your data is waiting in line and struggles to access the available network space.
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iTzPandaNuss
02-25-2016, 07:04 AM #4

Everyone seems confused about the topic. Increasing your connection speed will cause delays because your data is waiting in line and struggles to access the available network space.

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Shxe
Junior Member
8
02-25-2016, 07:52 AM
#5
How much strain are we putting on the system? If we fully utilize the connection, latency will increase as expected. The router is handling packet traffic as described earlier. I can usually sustain around 50% load while maintaining a ping of 8-9ms, but if the connection gets overwhelmed, the ping will rise as predicted. Are you running the Fios Quantum Router?
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Shxe
02-25-2016, 07:52 AM #5

How much strain are we putting on the system? If we fully utilize the connection, latency will increase as expected. The router is handling packet traffic as described earlier. I can usually sustain around 50% load while maintaining a ping of 8-9ms, but if the connection gets overwhelmed, the ping will rise as predicted. Are you running the Fios Quantum Router?

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jesus_xus
Member
160
03-01-2016, 07:09 AM
#6
Apologies for the delayed response. I'm working with a PF-Sense router.
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jesus_xus
03-01-2016, 07:09 AM #6

Apologies for the delayed response. I'm working with a PF-Sense router.

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Nayoz_
Junior Member
4
03-05-2016, 04:36 PM
#7
With QoS active and upload limited just a bit below your peak, it's perfectly fine.
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Nayoz_
03-05-2016, 04:36 PM #7

With QoS active and upload limited just a bit below your peak, it's perfectly fine.

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XxthegodmanxX
Junior Member
49
03-07-2016, 10:06 AM
#8
I’m checking how I’m affecting the network. Are you sending traffic from the same machine that’s making it slow? It might be a problem with the NIC on your device trying to handle the load. Try testing from another device on the LAN and observe if your latency improves.
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XxthegodmanxX
03-07-2016, 10:06 AM #8

I’m checking how I’m affecting the network. Are you sending traffic from the same machine that’s making it slow? It might be a problem with the NIC on your device trying to handle the load. Try testing from another device on the LAN and observe if your latency improves.