YLwpLUbcf77U 32 Posted ... For some time now on my main computer I can barely get speeds faster than around 300KB/sec up and down. If a site is really close, it may go near 1MB/sec, but that’s rare. If I go off VPN, the speeds are faster (a few megabytes a second). Multiple transfers on VPN don’t exceed 300KB/sec or so per connection, but altogether I can get up to about 1.5MB/sec. Before this started, I was uploading and downloading at 1-3MB/sec on VPN (with zero DNS leaks). What’s weird and why I am posting this is because on my other devices and computers, speeds are much faster. I connect to AirVPN via my DD-WRT router as well so it can’t be a client issue on my computer. All devices/computers connect to the same router and use the same connection. Thus, if I am downloading from site A on my main laptop, it may be 300KB/sec at most. I can then pull up site A on my phone and get 1MB+/sec. Things I have done to no avail: *Obviously tried various AirVPN servers (the ones in my country were noticeably faster, but otherwise all gave about the same performance) *Upgraded WiFi drivers (and lots of restarting). *Swapped out WiFi card for a newer model (and then upgraded drivers). *Turned off VPN on router and used AirVPN’s Eddie client. *Tested WireGuard on computer (no speed increase). *Tried 5Ghz WiFi network instead of 2.4 (""). It’s a very bizarre situation because both my older laptop and phone are right next to me and get considerably faster speeds. I’m at the point where I’m planning on buying a cheap router to use as an access point and will try hard-wiring the laptop to it. Laptop itself runs Windows 10 64-bit. Antivirus = NOD32 and also Malwarebytes. Quote Share this post Link to post
Air4141841 30 Posted ... if your ISP does not utilize ip6. I would suggest opening the network properties of the card you are using for internet and untick IP6. does speed improve if the device is hardwired btw? Quote Share this post Link to post
YLwpLUbcf77U 32 Posted ... Unchecking IP6 led to no difference. I haven't tested hard-wiring yet as the router is too far away. Even if that does the trick, it would be impractical short of buying a new router which I plan to do in a few months after we move. In case the problem still persists after moving (ie, using WiFi and getting slow speeds), I plan to buy a cheap router as I wrote in the post above. Quote Share this post Link to post