I have a WRTP54G connected to my DSL modem and then a wired WAP54G
connected on a seperate floor. When I am connected to the access point
(wirelessly) using my laptop (Fujitsu S7010D), I am connected at a
good 54Mbps, but my data transfer rates (aka my internet connection
speed is slow). But when I take that ethernet cable straight from the
router to my laptop, I get extremely fast speeds. Which means there is
something that has to do with the access point or the wireless network
that it generates. Here are the DSL report tests for both wireless and
wired
wireless
57kbps download and 118 kbps upload
wired
188kbps download and 159 kbps upload.
Now this is too much of a difference between a wired and a wireless
solution.
Any suggestions will be welcome! Thanks for your help.
Jatin
P.S. Both the tests were done on the dslreports site with Miami as the
test location.
On 13 Mar 2007 11:11:53 -0700, "gravity" <jatin.ahuja@gmail.com> wrote
in <1173809513.030450.155110@p10g2000cwp.googlegroups .com>:
>I have a WRTP54G connected to my DSL modem and then a wired WAP54G
>connected on a seperate floor. When I am connected to the access point
>(wirelessly) using my laptop (Fujitsu S7010D), I am connected at a
>good 54Mbps, but my data transfer rates (aka my internet connection
>speed is slow). But when I take that ethernet cable straight from the
>router to my laptop, I get extremely fast speeds. Which means there is
>something that has to do with the access point or the wireless network
>that it generates. Here are the DSL report tests for both wireless and
>wired
>
>wireless
>57kbps download and 118 kbps upload
>
>wired
>188kbps download and 159 kbps upload.
>
>Now this is too much of a difference between a wired and a wireless
>solution.
>
>Any suggestions will be welcome! Thanks for your help.
Likely weak signal and/or interference. Wireless has trouble
penetrating walls, ceilings and floors.
--
Best regards, FAQ for Wireless Internet: <http://Wireless.wikia.com>
John Navas FAQ for Wi-Fi: <http://wireless.wikia.com/wiki/Wi-Fi>
Wi-Fi How To: <http://wireless.wikia.com/wiki/Wi-Fi_HowTo>
Fixes to Wi-Fi Problems: <http://wireless.wikia.com/wiki/Wi-Fi_Fixes>
Thanks for the input, I would agree with you on weak signal/
interference, but this happens to me even if i sit like 2-3 feet away
from the router, at no point of time am I more than 6-10 feet away. As
far as interences are concerned, I have one cordless system in the
room that works at 5.8 Ghz...so I'm quite clueless! :(
Thanks!
Jatin
On Mar 14, 1:05 am, John Navas <spamfilt...@navasgroup.com> wrote:
> On 13 Mar 2007 11:11:53 -0700, "gravity" <jatin.ah...@gmail.com> wrote
> in <1173809513.030450.155...@p10g2000cwp.googlegroups .com>:
>
>
>
>
>
> >I have a WRTP54G connected to my DSL modem and then a wired WAP54G
> >connected on a seperate floor. When I am connected to the access point
> >(wirelessly) using my laptop (Fujitsu S7010D), I am connected at a
> >good 54Mbps, but my data transfer rates (aka my internet connection
> >speed is slow). But when I take that ethernet cable straight from the
> >router to my laptop, I get extremely fast speeds. Which means there is
> >something that has to do with the access point or the wireless network
> >that it generates. Here are the DSL report tests for both wireless and
> >wired
>
> >wireless
> >57kbps download and 118 kbps upload
>
> >wired
> >188kbps download and 159 kbps upload.
>
> >Now this is too much of a difference between a wired and a wireless
> >solution.
>
> >Any suggestions will be welcome! Thanks for your help.
>
> Likely weak signal and/or interference. Wireless has trouble
> penetrating walls, ceilings and floors.
>
> --
> Best regards, FAQ for Wireless Internet: <http://Wireless.wikia.com>
> John Navas FAQ for Wi-Fi: <http://wireless.wikia.com/wiki/Wi-Fi>
> Wi-Fi How To: <http://wireless.wikia.com/wiki/Wi-Fi_HowTo>
> Fixes to Wi-Fi Problems: <http://wireless.wikia.com/wiki/Wi-Fi_Fixes>- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
On 13 Mar 2007 23:40:06 -0700, "gravity" <jatin.ahuja@gmail.com> wrote
in <1173854406.318434.199880@l77g2000hsb.googlegroups .com>:
>Thanks for the input, I would agree with you on weak signal/
>interference, but this happens to me even if i sit like 2-3 feet away
>from the router, at no point of time am I more than 6-10 feet away. As
>far as interences are concerned, I have one cordless system in the
>room that works at 5.8 Ghz...so I'm quite clueless! :(
Your cordless phone could nonetheless be an issue -- some 5.8 phones use
that channel in one direction and 2.4 in the other direction. But your
distance makes that kind of problem unlikely.
What kind of DSL service do you have, and what speeds are you supposed
to get? Even your wired download speeds look low for standard consumer
DSL service (even allowing for the unreliability of DSLreports testing).
Perhaps you have a DSL problem.
p.s. Please don't switch posting styles (top vs bottom) in mid-thread
-- it's confusing. Thanks.
>On Mar 14, 1:05 am, John Navas <spamfilt...@navasgroup.com> wrote:
>> On 13 Mar 2007 11:11:53 -0700, "gravity" <jatin.ah...@gmail.com> wrote
>> in <1173809513.030450.155...@p10g2000cwp.googlegroups .com>:
>> >I have a WRTP54G connected to my DSL modem and then a wired WAP54G
>> >connected on a seperate floor. When I am connected to the access point
>> >(wirelessly) using my laptop (Fujitsu S7010D), I am connected at a
>> >good 54Mbps, but my data transfer rates (aka my internet connection
>> >speed is slow). But when I take that ethernet cable straight from the
>> >router to my laptop, I get extremely fast speeds. Which means there is
>> >something that has to do with the access point or the wireless network
>> >that it generates. Here are the DSL report tests for both wireless and
>> >wired
>>
>> >wireless
>> >57kbps download and 118 kbps upload
>>
>> >wired
>> >188kbps download and 159 kbps upload.
>>
>> >Now this is too much of a difference between a wired and a wireless
>> >solution.
>>
>> >Any suggestions will be welcome! Thanks for your help.
>>
>> Likely weak signal and/or interference. Wireless has trouble
>> penetrating walls, ceilings and floors.
--
Best regards, FAQ for Wireless Internet: <http://Wireless.wikia.com>
John Navas FAQ for Wi-Fi: <http://wireless.wikia.com/wiki/Wi-Fi>
Wi-Fi How To: <http://wireless.wikia.com/wiki/Wi-Fi_HowTo>
Fixes to Wi-Fi Problems: <http://wireless.wikia.com/wiki/Wi-Fi_Fixes>
I just had this problem with a wireless bridge repeater setup, and it turned
out the routers were too close together. When I separated them by 15 feet
and a wall, my full data speed returned. I confirmed this by doing a
download speedtest several times in before and after test.
On Mar 14, 7:54 pm, John Navas <spamfilt...@navasgroup.com> wrote:
> On 13 Mar 2007 23:40:06 -0700, "gravity" <jatin.ah...@gmail.com> wrote
> in <1173854406.318434.199...@l77g2000hsb.googlegroups .com>:
>
> >Thanks for the input, I would agree with you on weak signal/
> >interference, but this happens to me even if i sit like 2-3 feet away
> >from the router, at no point of time am I more than 6-10 feet away. As
> >far as interences are concerned, I have one cordless system in the
> >room that works at 5.8 Ghz...so I'm quite clueless! :(
>
> Your cordless phone could nonetheless be an issue -- some 5.8 phones use
> that channel in one direction and 2.4 in the other direction. But your
> distance makes that kind of problem unlikely.
>
> What kind of DSL service do you have, and what speeds are you supposed
> to get? Even your wired download speeds look low for standard consumer
> DSL service (even allowing for the unreliability of DSLreports testing).
> Perhaps you have a DSL problem.
>
> p.s. Please don't switch posting styles (top vs bottom) in mid-thread
> -- it's confusing. Thanks.
>
>
>
>
>
> >On Mar 14, 1:05 am, John Navas <spamfilt...@navasgroup.com> wrote:
> >> On 13 Mar 2007 11:11:53 -0700, "gravity" <jatin.ah...@gmail.com> wrote
> >> in <1173809513.030450.155...@p10g2000cwp.googlegroups .com>:
> >> >I have a WRTP54G connected to my DSL modem and then a wired WAP54G
> >> >connected on a seperate floor. When I am connected to the access point
> >> >(wirelessly) using my laptop (Fujitsu S7010D), I am connected at a
> >> >good 54Mbps, but my data transfer rates (aka my internet connection
> >> >speed is slow). But when I take that ethernet cable straight from the
> >> >router to my laptop, I get extremely fast speeds. Which means there is
> >> >something that has to do with the access point or the wireless network
> >> >that it generates. Here are the DSL report tests for both wireless and
> >> >wired
>
> >> >wireless
> >> >57kbps download and 118 kbps upload
>
> >> >wired
> >> >188kbps download and 159 kbps upload.
>
> >> >Now this is too much of a difference between a wired and a wireless
> >> >solution.
>
> >> >Any suggestions will be welcome! Thanks for your help.
>
> >> Likely weak signal and/or interference. Wireless has trouble
> >> penetrating walls, ceilings and floors.
>
> --
> Best regards, FAQ for Wireless Internet: <http://Wireless.wikia.com>
> John Navas FAQ for Wi-Fi: <http://wireless.wikia.com/wiki/Wi-Fi>
> Wi-Fi How To: <http://wireless.wikia.com/wiki/Wi-Fi_HowTo>
> Fixes to Wi-Fi Problems: <http://wireless.wikia.com/wiki/Wi-Fi_Fixes>- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
Hi John,
Sorry for the confusing response, I'm not too concerned about my
internet speed (my actual DSL), because I'm in India, and the speeds
here are somewhat terrible, atm..i'm on a 256kbps line, i'm trying to
get it upgraded to 2 mbps.
So I dont really understand, why I would be getting a faster speed
when my laptop is directly connected to the ethernet wire, as opposed
to being connected wirelessly.
Do you think it could be something with my wireless lan card? Its an
atheros (onboard my laptop)
On Mar 15, 8:40 am, "Ray" <argyle1nosp...@hotmail.com> wrote:
> I just had this problem with a wireless bridge repeater setup, and it turned
> out the routers were too close together. When I separated them by 15 feet
> and a wall, my full data speed returned. I confirmed this by doing a
> download speedtest several times in before and after test.
>
> It also gave me some router crashing trouble.
Hi..thanks for the help! But my router and AP are on different floors
of the house, seperated by more than 35-40 feet! :(
On Mar 18, 2:00 pm, "gravity" <jatin.ah...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Mar 14, 7:54 pm, John Navas <spamfilt...@navasgroup.com> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> > On 13 Mar 2007 23:40:06 -0700, "gravity" <jatin.ah...@gmail.com> wrote
> > in <1173854406.318434.199...@l77g2000hsb.googlegroups .com>:
>
> > >Thanks for the input, I would agree with you on weak signal/
> > >interference, but this happens to me even if i sit like 2-3 feet away
> > >from the router, at no point of time am I more than 6-10 feet away. As
> > >far as interences are concerned, I have one cordless system in the
> > >room that works at 5.8 Ghz...so I'm quite clueless! :(
>
> > Your cordless phone could nonetheless be an issue -- some 5.8 phones use
> > that channel in one direction and 2.4 in the other direction. But your
> > distance makes that kind of problem unlikely.
>
> > What kind of DSL service do you have, and what speeds are you supposed
> > to get? Even your wired download speeds look low for standard consumer
> > DSL service (even allowing for the unreliability of DSLreports testing).
> > Perhaps you have a DSL problem.
>
> > p.s. Please don't switch posting styles (top vs bottom) in mid-thread
> > -- it's confusing. Thanks.
>
> > >On Mar 14, 1:05 am, John Navas <spamfilt...@navasgroup.com> wrote:
> > >> On 13 Mar 2007 11:11:53 -0700, "gravity" <jatin.ah...@gmail.com> wrote
> > >> in <1173809513.030450.155...@p10g2000cwp.googlegroups .com>:
> > >> >I have a WRTP54G connected to my DSL modem and then a wired WAP54G
> > >> >connected on a seperate floor. When I am connected to the access point
> > >> >(wirelessly) using my laptop (Fujitsu S7010D), I am connected at a
> > >> >good 54Mbps, but my data transfer rates (aka my internet connection
> > >> >speed is slow). But when I take that ethernet cable straight from the
> > >> >router to my laptop, I get extremely fast speeds. Which means there is
> > >> >something that has to do with the access point or the wireless network
> > >> >that it generates. Here are the DSL report tests for both wireless and
> > >> >wired
>
> > >> >wireless
> > >> >57kbps download and 118 kbps upload
>
> > >> >wired
> > >> >188kbps download and 159 kbps upload.
>
> > >> >Now this is too much of a difference between a wired and a wireless
> > >> >solution.
>
> > >> >Any suggestions will be welcome! Thanks for your help.
>
> > >> Likely weak signal and/or interference. Wireless has trouble
> > >> penetrating walls, ceilings and floors.
>
> > --
> > Best regards, FAQ for Wireless Internet: <http://Wireless.wikia.com>
> > John Navas FAQ for Wi-Fi: <http://wireless.wikia.com/wiki/Wi-Fi>
> > Wi-Fi How To: <http://wireless.wikia.com/wiki/Wi-Fi_HowTo>
> > Fixes to Wi-Fi Problems: <http://wireless.wikia.com/wiki/Wi-Fi_Fixes>- Hide quoted text -
>
> > - Show quoted text -
>
> Hi John,
>
> Sorry for the confusing response, I'm not too concerned about my
> internet speed (my actual DSL), because I'm in India, and the speeds
> here are somewhat terrible, atm..i'm on a 256kbps line, i'm trying to
> get it upgraded to 2 mbps.
>
> So I dont really understand, why I would be getting a faster speed
> when my laptop is directly connected to the ethernet wire, as opposed
> to being connected wirelessly.
>
> Do you think it could be something with my wireless lan card? Its an
> atheros (onboard my laptop)
>
> Thanks for your help! :)
>
> Jatin- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
Oh also, my router and my AP both have different SSID's, and are on
different channels, would that make a difference?