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unrlx

46 posts

Geek


  #2333707 10-Oct-2019 09:56
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Hi guys,

So I got from user ishmael on here for a good price and just set it up.

 

I've been experiencing a drop in speed the last few days, it was literally 30 mbps even on the ethernet.

 

I just set up Google Wifi 3 pack and its running at over 80 mbps now which is awesome. Going to see how Gigantic does when it comes on the 14th for me.




unrlx

46 posts

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  #2337267 15-Oct-2019 11:59
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Thought I would continue here.

Setup 3 mesh points with the primary connecting directly to the orcon router. Each puck separated by 1 wall each.

Checked speeds and points on network. Speeds on the mesh giving me 600+ dl and 400+ upload which is expected.When I'm standing right next to the primary puck and do a linetest, it gives me well over 200+ dl. When I try sites like linetest.nz or speedtest, it gives me 50-70 dl and 100+ upload when I'm closer to the third puck in my room.

I rang both orcon and Google wifi support, orcon couldn't answer much about gwifi and gwifi support suggested that I look at the speed showing on the gwifi app.

So my question here is which one do I rely on?

  #2337497 15-Oct-2019 16:12
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what are the link speeds of the mesh points? the software should show this  do they have good enough signal to talk back to the main unit?

 

are you using the speedtest windows 10 app? if not its worth trying




deadlyllama
1262 posts

Uber Geek

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  #2337553 15-Oct-2019 17:25
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Remember that mesh uses the same radio to talk to your laptop and the central puck. Just like with a wifi repeater. So speeds can drop off significantly. If the signal has to hop from central to satellite 1 to satellite 2 to your laptop speeds will be poor.

Put the satellite pucks where there is good signal from the central one if at all possible. The "I don't know how Google wifi works" way of doing this is to turn the satellite pucks off and measure signal strength in potential puck locations using your laptop.

  #2337703 15-Oct-2019 20:45
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deadlyllama: Remember that mesh uses the same radio to talk to your laptop and the central puck. Just like with a wifi repeater. So speeds can drop off significantly. If the signal has to hop from central to satellite 1 to satellite 2 to your laptop speeds will be poor.

Put the satellite pucks where there is good signal from the central one if at all possible. The "I don't know how Google wifi works" way of doing this is to turn the satellite pucks off and measure signal strength in potential puck locations using your laptop.

 

the first paragraph is not quiet correct, they will usually have a 3rd radio in them, 2.4, and 5ghz for your normal wifi networks and a 2nd 5ghz radio for the backhaul.

 

the biggest issue is where you place the satellites as they need to have decent signal stregnth to provide a fast connection back to the main unit.


unrlx

46 posts

Geek


  #2337715 15-Oct-2019 20:57
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They are showing a great signal between the pucks.


everettpsycho
614 posts

Ultimate Geek


  #2337717 15-Oct-2019 21:01
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The backhaul radio depends on your units. Only the more expensive units have a second 5ghz radio for the backhaul, the more budget options share the 5ghz radio between devices and backhaul. I think Google lacks a dedicated radio so shares it's 5ghz signal. I'd give your old power line adapters a whirl and see if using that as the backhaul helps at all. No guarantee it will but it could help you pinpoint what's causing your issues, if it's bad sorting the furthest puck in this way might get you a decent body on the WiFi. Some information on wired backhaul here:

https://support.google.com/wifi/answer/7215624?hl=en

 
 
 
 

Shop now on Samsung phones, tablets, TVs and more (affiliate link).
unrlx

46 posts

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  #2337719 15-Oct-2019 21:05
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The weird thing is a 1080p 15 min video clip now takes less than a min to dl. Which really confuses me. Downloading actual files are quick but speedtest results showing me its like the speed before I changed to gigabit.

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