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What to do with a low rate?

nikname2014

New Around Here
Good evening. I did not know in what forum thread to ask this question. I'll try to ask it here. The question is: how do I properly organize the network or routing to a home network, the speed does not cut the router (gateway)? I have an internet connection 100Mbit / s. It is. Unless, of course, be connected directly to the computer. Through the router is obtained in the region of 3 Mbit / s. Everything turns on the provider dynamically. Just check the MAC address. I serves as a gateway Asus RT-N10. DHCP handing out addresses only via wi-fi. By RT-N10 connected network storage, another routers: Netgear WNDR3800, TP-Link (mode of AP). Through the router WNDR3800 is connected desktop computer. To TP-Link and asus connect wi-fi devices. How to make losses in the routing gateway were minimal, and that 3 Mbit / s is blasphemy. Asus firmware on a standard (1.0.2.4). In the last WNDR3800 from the manufacturer. Most settings are standard. If you require any further details please contact us. In this forum, the first and my english is poor. Please write without slang. PS Speed ​​wi-fi does not interest me. It is also cut, but not as critical (20-30 Mbit / s). Devices connected via wi-fi that's enough, but to me that is connected via lan critical missing 3 Mbit / s for torrents. Thanks in advance for any help.
 
So we can help, please simplify to....
Your ISP speed, downstream, upstream, real contract rates,
Router... Yours or theirs
Your wifi clients... 11n?
your wifi coverage needs?

What help is needed?
 
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So we can help, please simplify to....
Your ISP speed, downstream, upstream, real contract rates,
Router... Yours or theirs
Your wifi clients... 11n?
your wifi coverage needs?

What help is needed?

Agan.

ISP speed 100 Mbit/s

downstream and upstream 100 Mbit/s without routers (directly to my computer) with routers 3Mbit/s (routers its Netgear WNDR3800, Asus RT-N10 tried both, Asus another 30 percent slower)

Real contract rates is 30-100 Mbit/s (not below 30)

Routers are: Netgear WNDR3800, Asus RT-N10, their routers do not know.

My wi-fi clients are phones and notebook (g / n)
My wi-fi suits me.

I am not satisfied with the performance drop when connected via LAN routers.

I guess my routers can not handle the routing. What can I do about how to find the cause of the fall speed and how to live?
 
I would check what your 100Mbit connection is using for ethernet--100Mbit or 1000Mbit, full or half duplex. Then make sure your router is manually configured for the same. This might solve the problem.
 
Agan.

ISP speed 100 Mbit/s

downstream and upstream 100 Mbit/s without routers (directly to my computer) with routers 3Mbit/s (routers its Netgear WNDR3800, Asus RT-N10 tried both, Asus another 30 percent slower)

Real contract rates is 30-100 Mbit/s (not below 30)

Routers are: Netgear WNDR3800, Asus RT-N10, their routers do not know.

My wi-fi clients are phones and notebook (g / n)
My wi-fi suits me.

I am not satisfied with the performance drop when connected via LAN routers.

I guess my routers can not handle the routing. What can I do about how to find the cause of the fall speed and how to live?

does your ISP provide modem/router all in one? Or just modem?

100Mbps up and down is unusual in the US. Variable 30-100Mbps is too wide of a range to be billed for on some contract agreement. Typical upstream rates are a fraction of downstream rates. Maybe there's confusion here.

Most consumer routers cannot support 100Mbps. Perhaps not 50Mbps either, sustained, on the WAN side. A few top end ones can. WiFi speeds are a different matter.

Your LAN should have ONE router and may have many ethernet switches and WiFi access points (APs). Any WiFi router can be re-purposed as an AP (see FAQs). When done so, it is called an AP not a router as it does not route; its WAN port is unused.
 
100Mbps up and down is unusual in the US...
Judging by their challenges of the English language, I'm guessing they're not in the US. Europe has faster speeds than us in most areas. Except NYC's Verizon FIOS. I miss the bandwidth I had there--75/35 was just a notch above base level. :eek: They actually had 500/150 available straight to my home. :eek:
 
I would check what your 100Mbit connection is using for ethernet--100Mbit or 1000Mbit, full or half duplex. Then make sure your router is manually configured for the same. This might solve the problem.
Dear Samir, my connection from ISP is 100 Mbit/s (Half or duplex?! I do not know how to check it. Really, i can see only a socket on my wall ... ^_^ - in it Orange/White-Orange/Green-White/Green cables). But i'll check it.

does your ISP provide modem/router all in one? Or just modem?

100Mbps up and down is unusual in the US. Variable 30-100Mbps is too wide of a range to be billed for on some contract agreement. Typical upstream rates are a fraction of downstream rates. Maybe there's confusion here.

Most consumer routers cannot support 100Mbps. Perhaps not 50Mbps either, sustained, on the WAN side. A few top end ones can. WiFi speeds are a different matter.

Your LAN should have ONE router and may have many ethernet switches and WiFi access points (APs). Any WiFi router can be re-purposed as an AP (see FAQs). When done so, it is called an AP not a router as it does not route; its WAN port is unused.

What have my ISP on his side i can't to know. "100Mbps up and down is unusual in the US" - my condolences. To me this is not enough. I am not from US. Sorry. 30-100Mbit/s is usually for our region. Its mean: if other users do not use the hard router provider, the entire channel is yours (all 100Mbit/s), but it can't be lower then 30Mbit/s. I have my getway like router, another router by AP (Wi-fi) and one another i want use like print serv and to connect my desktop computer.

Judging by their challenges of the English language, I'm guessing they're not in the US. Europe has faster speeds than us in most areas. Except NYC's Verizon FIOS. I miss the bandwidth I had there--75/35 was just a notch above base level. :eek: They actually had 500/150 available straight to my home. :eek:
Absolutely right. I just can not understand why I was from England? From these findings? I apologize for my English and at the same time for the English Google translation :)
 
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Example

For clarity
GoodVeryGood.jpg


and

BadVeryBad.jpg
 
Thank you for the replies and the good diagrams. I have questions.

What speed do you get when you connect Comp to Asus router with cable?

Why do you have two routers? Why not just one?
 
Sorry. And can anyone knows the answer to the next question. How often ARP requests must walk to my network card? For some reason all the "who" knock me. I also learned that my ISP switch cisco. And it looks like I know what brands of routers in my neighborhood.

Thank you for the replies and the good diagrams. I have questions.

What speed do you get when you connect Comp to Asus router with cable?

Why do you have two routers? Why not just one?

I have a second router will connect to any device on the network to the printer. As more accurately test the speed of my connection? Where to begin checking the network?

AND NOW Now I can not check anything. Tech support told me about the problem in a network with downloading torrents. That is to rely on any measure in such a network does not have to. Can you tell yet what mistakes I have in planning the network, and how best to organize it in my case? Unless of course you can find an extra minute.
PS. All equipment, except for T-Plink I got nothing. One router is presented for some reason, like the NAS, the second as unnecessary given.
 
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I have a second router will connect to any device on the network to the printer. As more accurately test the speed of my connection? Where to begin checking the network?
I do not think this second router is necessary. You can plug everything into your first router.

Plug your computer into the Asus router and run a speed test. What speed do you get?
 
I apologize. Problem was from The sides provider. I do not know what is its essence. But after I contacted them about the slow speed of torrent downloads, the situation changed cardinally. Thanks to those who responded and tried to help me. And at the end. Could anybody comment on my network and admitted flaws in it?
 
Glad you were able to get it figured out. :)

As far as your network, I would get rid of the second router and just use one router for everything unless you are trying to isolate the notebook on the 100-200 IP range from the rest of the network. That's the only thing I would change.
 
Glad you were able to get it figured out. :)

As far as your network, I would get rid of the second router and just use one router for everything unless you are trying to isolate the notebook on the 100-200 IP range from the rest of the network. That's the only thing I would change.

Router 1 and Router 2 are connected by only one cable. And still no possibility to lay. Are in different rooms, each room on one ethernet outlet. In fact, I use the second router just because it has a USB. So I connect the printer to the network, as well as a printer next to the computer, then connect it to the router 2.
 
Router 1 and Router 2 are connected by only one cable. And still no possibility to lay. Are in different rooms, each room on one ethernet outlet. In fact, I use the second router just because it has a USB. So I connect the printer to the network, as well as a printer next to the computer, then connect it to the router 2.
If cabling restrictions between router 1 and 2 make it difficult to connect everything, then use router 1 as a switch and let the Internet connection go directly to router 2. Unless this disconnects the notebook. Then this will not work.
 

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