Feb 252011
 

I was reminded again today of the old adage that even when you think you know what the prob­lem prob­ably is, until you meas­ure it, you’re likely to be wrong. This applies par­tic­u­larly to factors that impede your inter­net speed.

The ADSL inter­net band­width pack­age we signed up for, many moons ago, was 3 Mbps. I know, that seems laugh­ably slow to many of you, but I don’t down­load video much and it’s adequate for my needs. On a whim, Tim decided to test the speed and found it to be only 1.14 Mbps (even when tak­ing out everything in the way, such as fire­wall and router). We tested a few times, and got sim­il­ar res­ults. So even­tu­ally we called up the ISP and com­plained, they ran their tests and found noth­ing, and as a last resort from their side, offered to send us a new modem.

Now the mod­el I had was less than a year old, a Thom­son Speedtouch ST516 V6, which I’d bought when I had trouble con­nect­ing last year. So I was doubt­ful that it would turn out to be an issue with the modem, more con­cerned that it might be an issue with the phone wir­ing in this old house. But hey, it does­n’t hurt to try a new modem, so we agreed.

A couple of days later, a new Thom­son Speedtouch ST516 V6 modem shows up in the mail. I plug it in, run speedtest.net again, and all of a sud­den we’re get­ting 2.12 Mbps, a good-sized increase and much closer to what we’re pay­ing for. (The house wir­ing and vari­ous oth­er factors prob­ably make up the rest).

So now I’m puzzled. Two modems, from the out­side exactly the same, with the same mod­el num­ber, bought 11 months apart, with very dif­fer­ent res­ults. It’s not like there are user-con­fig­ur­able jump pins on the back that could be set wrongly. The only thing I can think of is that I got a dud with the first modem. Any­one have oth­er explanations?

  6 Responses to “Internet Speed”

  1. Pre­sum­ably you plugged the old modem back in the veri­fy it was still pro­du­cing the slow rate of down­load? This rules out arbit­rary changes from the ISP.

  2. This is prob­ably a redund­ant sug­ges­tion, but make sure you have the little fil­ter dongles in front of *all* the POTS devices in the house oth­er than the ADSL modem.

    If you make enough noise, Telus will send someone out to your house, test the hell out of your wir­ing, and pos­sibly run new wire. They did it for us at our old house, and our reli­ab­il­ity went through the roof.

    At our new house, once they sor­ted out the SNAFU res­ult­ing from the pre­vi­ous occu­pant’s non-Telus home phone ser­vice, and once I remembered to install the dongle in front of the land­line, we’re get­ting 13MBits out of the max­im­um 15. Not too shabby for $45/month.

  3. Oh, and our modem is a ST516 too, it’s been rock sol­id since the ancient wir­ing was worked around.

  4. Well, modems are mostly soft­ware these days, so you might have new­er firm­ware and then there is a lot of magic such as “train­ing”.

    Quite often turn­ing everything off for a while and put­ting it back on again /could/ res­ult in a dif­fer­ent port, which can make a big dif­fer­ence, espe­cially if yours has been flagged as unre­li­able and capped. It’s magic­al and depend­ent on the ISP, who might have coin­cid­ent­ally spot­ted a prob­lem with your port or not wanted to admit to it.

    Just to brag, I just speed tested my home broad­band and got 52.4 Mp/s down 4.65 Mb/s up, 20ms ping, and am a good can­did­ate for 100Mb/s as soon as they roll it out in my area. Fibre is the answer!

  5. i agree with paul, per­haps it’s firm­ware or a bad port. Fail­ing that it’s magic 🙂 !

  6. the older wir­ing in a house usu­ally does not come into play as your modem requires only 1 jack (oth­ers do not mat­ter) and the loop had to come to your house sev­er­al kms. dsl fil­ters installed ‘cor­rectly’ are very import­ant! plug fil­ter into wall, then device into fil­ter oth­er wise it is installed back­wards. no fil­ter on modem! modems do not fail in this man­ner and i sus­pect the soft­ware builds are dif­fer­ent hence the speed differential

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