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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Road Side Pub
Networking help needed.
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<blockquote data-quote="alicecooper" data-source="post: 15194578" data-attributes="member: 169634"><p>When it slows to a crawl, open cmd and type this.</p><p></p><p>tracert <a href="http://www.google.com" target="_blank">www.google.com</a></p><p></p><p>That will tell you where the issue is in your connection. Let it go through the hops then do it again. I would do it atleast 3-5 times in case your network decides to behave during the test. It will show the speed in between each hop (ms), if anything is above 100ms, then the connection is slow to that hop. </p><p></p><p>For example, if I ran a tracert at home it would look like this.</p><p></p><p>1 1ms 1ms 2ms 192.168.1.1 (this is your router)</p><p>2 37ms 2ms 5ms nwinternet</p><p>3 * * * <----- this would signal a timeout, meaning the connection is dropping.</p><p></p><p>You don't want to see the first hop going above 10ms, granted it will still run fast, but it should almost always be within 3ms because that's LAN speed, unless your router is messed up.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>EDIT: Bah lol, I missed the very last part of your post, i guess it sounds like it is a router issue. I would suggest a factory reset, or trying a different router if you have one. I was experiencing this issue with my dads router over wireless and I tried just about everything except a factory reset and it wouldn't resolve. Even updated the firmware.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="alicecooper, post: 15194578, member: 169634"] When it slows to a crawl, open cmd and type this. tracert [URL="http://www.google.com"]www.google.com[/URL] That will tell you where the issue is in your connection. Let it go through the hops then do it again. I would do it atleast 3-5 times in case your network decides to behave during the test. It will show the speed in between each hop (ms), if anything is above 100ms, then the connection is slow to that hop. For example, if I ran a tracert at home it would look like this. 1 1ms 1ms 2ms 192.168.1.1 (this is your router) 2 37ms 2ms 5ms nwinternet 3 * * * <----- this would signal a timeout, meaning the connection is dropping. You don't want to see the first hop going above 10ms, granted it will still run fast, but it should almost always be within 3ms because that's LAN speed, unless your router is messed up. EDIT: Bah lol, I missed the very last part of your post, i guess it sounds like it is a router issue. I would suggest a factory reset, or trying a different router if you have one. I was experiencing this issue with my dads router over wireless and I tried just about everything except a factory reset and it wouldn't resolve. Even updated the firmware. [/QUOTE]
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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Road Side Pub
Networking help needed.
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