wally4u 2 Posted ... Hi,I recently switched to a new ISP and noticed that my speeds suddenly are significantly (10x) slower than with my previous ISP.How can I check if they indeed are throttling my down/uploads? Old situation I was able to get about 90% of my bandwith both up/down. so about 90Mbit/sec.Current situation ~8-12Mbit/sec...... I tried switching the protocols and ports without much success. Test I did:FTP/HTTP/BT download. No VPN ~300Mbit. with VPN ~10Mbit (varies a bit)FTP/HTTP/BT upload . No VPN ~30Mbit. with VPN ~5Mbit (varies a bit) Quote Share this post Link to post
Guest Posted ... Would like to also know this. I am on a similar situation as you but i get a bit better download speed. Quote Share this post Link to post
zhang888 1066 Posted ... If you used the same hardware and devices and the only change was the ISP, it might be throttling/QoS or simply bad peering.To know which one of the 2 is more likely to be the issue, try different servers and SSL/SSH tunnel methods. Quote Hide zhang888's signature Hide all signatures Occasional moderator, sometimes BOFH. Opinions are my own, except when my wife disagrees. Share this post Link to post
wally4u 2 Posted ... Well, I basically tried all the servers that have a decent ping and minimal load.Tried changing the ports as well.These are the results of the internal speedtest:Automatic: Down: 21.293 Mbit/s Out, 20.574 Mbit/s In (96%), 20MB - Up: 22.924 Mbit/s Out, 20.950 Mbit/s In (91%), 20MB - Date: Tue, 24 Jan 2017 21:51:18 GMT - Buffers: 20MB/20MB - Laps: 3, Time: 68.48 secsUDP Port 443 Down: 28.270 Mbit/s Out, 25.489 Mbit/s In (90%), 20MB - Up: 22.728 Mbit/s Out, 20.134 Mbit/s In (88%), 20MB - Date: Tue, 24 Jan 2017 21:36:15 GMT - Buffers: 20MB/20MB - Laps: 3, Time: 47.29 secsSSL Port 443 Down: 10.572 Mbit/s Out, 8.982 Mbit/s In (84%), 20MB - Up: 21.695 Mbit/s Out, 21.689 Mbit/s In (99%), 20MB - Date: Tue, 24 Jan 2017 21:42:48 GMT - Buffers: 20MB/20MB - Laps: 3, Time: 78.33 secsSSH Port 22 Down: 18.299 Mbit/s Out, 28.248 Mbit/s In (154%), 20MB - Up: 22.900 Mbit/s Out, 21.296 Mbit/s In (92%), 20MB - Date: Tue, 24 Jan 2017 21:48:05 GMT - Buffers: 20MB/20MB - Laps: 3, Time: 57.44 secs No VPN: Speedtest.net Ping 10ms. Down: 298Mbit/Sec Up 29Mbit/Sec (basically max my modem can do.) Any suggestions, to check peering? Quote Share this post Link to post
OpenSourcerer 1441 Posted ... Glasnost: Test if your ISP is shaping your traffic Quote Hide OpenSourcerer's signature Hide all signatures NOT AN AIRVPN TEAM MEMBER. USE TICKETS FOR PROFESSIONAL SUPPORT. LZ1's New User Guide to AirVPN « Plenty of stuff for advanced users, too! Want to contact me directly? All relevant methods are on my About me page. Share this post Link to post
Khariz 109 Posted ... Glasnost: Test if your ISP is shaping your trafficWell that sucks. They shut it down on February 5th. 1 OpenSourcerer reacted to this Quote Share this post Link to post
~Daniel~ 11 Posted ... Glasnost: Test if your ISP is shaping your trafficWell that sucks. They shut it down on February 5th. Found diffprobe as another option based on the M-LAB platform. Difference is that it's an executable to download and run; might not be folks preferred option. Quote Share this post Link to post
wally4u 2 Posted ... Well, diffprobe only give servers occupied (Tried many times).Other suggestions? Quote Share this post Link to post
zhang888 1066 Posted ... Simple but practical test would be downloading some popular Linux torrent with VPN and without.If you see a big difference, like 10x in your case, then you can assume your ISP is throttling VPN. Quote Hide zhang888's signature Hide all signatures Occasional moderator, sometimes BOFH. Opinions are my own, except when my wife disagrees. Share this post Link to post
~Daniel~ 11 Posted ... Simple but practical test would be downloading some popular Linux torrent with VPN and without.If you see a big difference, like 10x in your case, then you can assume your ISP is throttling VPN.I wish all torrents had awesome peers like the Linux distro's; always get amazing torrent download speeds. I recently decided I will always download a Linux distro as my VPN/Torrent test. Previously I would have just use some other "random" file I planned to d/l anyway, where speeds/peers often sucked, making it a bogus test. I d/l a Linux torrent a reach full-speed in seconds! Sorry if I am getting off topic, but is there a crappy_peers = OFF setting I implement somewhere? Quote Share this post Link to post