Is Ping Based On Upload Or Download Speed


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I just purchased a C6300v2 after having an Xfinity provided modem/router and am experiencing heavy upload speed fluctuation as well as ping spikes while gaming. I work from home currently as most of us do, and the upload speed fluctuation is horrible as I work out of a shared outlook email box which needs constant and stable connection to function. My outlook box drops service a few times a minute since I switched to netgear. I found another post with a similar issue, and even more specific, they mentioned that their ping in league of legends would skyrocket at exactly 0:55-1:05 into the game which I also experience every single game since switching. Another similar post mentioned something about openWRT or DDWRT which I checked and this router supports neither. I had a comcast rep come out and rewire the home and the issues persist. If I reset the unit the issues will subside for a few hours until they return.

The short of it though is that one machine sends a series of special packets, that are forwarded from router/ switches and through gateways if required to leave one network for another. This trip through devices is a ping time, which is encapsulated and sent back. Generally two pings do not have to follow the same route. The number of hops is the biggest determiner on average of ping times, although there are times when higher upload or download could matter (flooded networks).

Both are equally important, because ping measures the roundtrip time, as in, you send a packet to some machine (upload), and a packet is returned (download), and the time from start to finish is the ping time. As a result, both should play an equal part in your pingtime.

However, there are some things worth noting: Most home connections nowadays have lower upload rates than download, so upload can clog easier, resulting in a longer packet queue, hence higher ping (and/or packet loss).

A big factor is how much unused bandwidth you have for uploads, and how much you have for downloads. Since ping works by sending a message and listening for a response, both directions affect the total round trip time. The packets are essentially the same size in both directions (unless something fragments or reassembles a fragmented packet). If either your download or upload pipe is almost full, ping is more likely to be delayed. Most home connections are asymmetric, which just means you have more download bandwidth available. As a result, it may be easier to fill up your upload bandwidth, depending on your usage. Often times, ICMP (ping) traffic has a lower priority than other traffic, so it gets delayed or dropped when the pipe gets busy.

By default, ping send small packets which only indicated the latency. However the command takes arguments to modify the packet size and rate. The theory is that you can increase the size and rate of packets to the point where they would saturate the link, then you can use the packet statistics to calculate the speed at which this happens.

Upload speed measures how fast information can transfer from you. It affects things like how you appear on video calls, how fast you can upload files to the cloud, and how long it takes to add attachments to emails. Upload speed is measured in megabits per second (Mbps).

1: Plus taxes and fees. Upload/download speed and device streaming claims are based on maximum wired speeds. Actual internet, Wi-Fi speeds, and Wi-Fi coverage are not guaranteed and can vary based on factors such as home or business size and layout, construction materials, hardware and software limitations, latency, packet loss, etc. See what affects internet speeds.

Again..my download speeds are fine..upload best it has ever tested is slightly above 2, mostly much lower..and ZOOM needs a minimum of 2...my Ping's are all over the place and typically very high 1285.

My 8800L download speed is never above 3mbs. I have followed all the threads on the internet regarding resets and such. Added an external antenna expecting at least one more bar of connectivity and that did not happen. I left my home and went to a park closer to the Verizon tower, still 1 to 2 bars fluctuating and no change to download or upload speeds and still with an external antenna attached. Surely this is a problem because I have the same outcome on signal strength on my Note 9. Very disappointing. I know this is business but poor service is not good business and surely Verizon is aware of the low performing tower Im attached to. Zip code 36022.

How are the results calculated? To calculate your Internet speed, FAST.com performs a series of downloads from and uploads to Netflix servers and calculates the maximum speed your Internet connection can provide. More details are in our blog post.

Essentially, a good Internet speed for gaming comes down to what kind of gaming you're doing. If you're into competitive gaming (i.e, if you play "Overwatch", "Fortnite", or the like), you likely want both high download and upload speeds to prevent "lag" (or, like we said before, "latency", the more technical term). That said, an Internet speed of above 300 Mbps is usually ideal for gaming, and especially multiplayer or "competitive" gaming. Anything lower than that falls into the danger "lag zone", and there's nothing worse than lagging just when you were about to pull off a sick kill shot (and you get PWNed, womp womp). You may experience these with the internet speed you get from 5g home internet.

Internet speed, latency, and ping rate can all affect your gaming performance and are essential when it comes to having the best internet for gaming. Xfinity can help you find the ideal broadband Internet speed for gaming and reduce your latency to help take your gaming to the next level. Test your internet speed with the Xfinity Internet Speed Test today. Xfinity's 10G Network looks to take internet gaming to new heights.

Use the Internet speed test to see how your current Internet or WiFi connection measures up. Results may vary based on device capabilities, number of connected devices and router placement. If your WiFi speed is lower than expected, try moving closer to your router or checking your internet speed with another device.

There are a handful of factors that could impact or slow down your download and upload speeds:


If your computer is older or out of date, it may affect your transfer rate. Try checking to see if your computer requires updating.


Check your wireless connection. Walls, radios, or increased distance from your router might be causing WiFi interference. Try getting closer to your router or plugging it in directly.


For further support troubleshooting your Internet connection, click here.

Good coverage means your device is getting a strong WiFi signal. That strong signal will also deliver as much speed as your device can handle. As you move away from your router, signal strength diminishes, slowing upload/download speeds and reducing coverage. The placement of your router is key to ensuring both coverage and speed for your devices.

I have 300u package with 20 upload white coda 4582 and wired direct from outside to the modem. Lately over the past few months its been a hit and miss. But now upload speed is a 0.90Mbps and latency spikes of 700 to 900ms over Wi-Fi or ethernet. Obviously impossible to have a good experience. I seem to have a few warning and critical DOCSIS events logged. Nobody in support stayed on topic. 



My upload right now is 0.33 Mbps. and after speaking to 2 more CSR reps I have been receiving different answers. Any forum or moderators here can chime in? Last CSR response was simply disconnect and reconnect again. Grrr I need help and nobody is helping at Rogers.

I have same issue, i moved to a new house 1 month ago, 1GB download speed Ignite Internet, no TV just only internet service, and i can't work from home, watch a movie or play online, having a lot of high latency issue. Rogers technician open tickets and close tickets and never solved, still. I am really upset thats i will post here, because i don't have any solution until now . My computer is connected directly to the Rogers Modem LAN port. this is a capture of ping google.com, normally should be 13 to 30ms latency. This is becoming EXTREMELY FRUSTRATING.

Currently I am using a Lan-Router with a sim card that provides meh good download and upload speeds, but a way to high ping to play multiple player online games. If I understood correctly I could maybe eliminate this problem by purchasing a OpenWrt-usable Lan-Router, than flashing OpenWrt and setting up SQM. My question ist would this work or I am too short thinking?

Tested again and got confusing results, so I deleted my first answer. bottom line is: most of the time ping "unloaded" is around 35ms, "download active": around +60 to +120ms, "upload active" around +50 to +70ms. (green latency category on the waveform website)

SQM puts a lot of load on the router CPU, so you need to understand what speed service you need to shape with SQM/QoS. If your ISP is only 100 Mbps, then a cheap MT7621 ramips router will take care of SQM for you (something like a ZyXEL WSM20 Multy M1 or Belkin RT1800). If you are at half gig and willing to lose just a little of that half gig speed, something like a Netgear WAX206 or Belkin RT3200 will have enough CPU. If you have full gig service, you need something like a NanoPi R4S or x86 based router. Of these, the NanoPi R4S does not include WiFi and just has one wan and lan port each, so you need to pair it with a WiFi router that has extra ports to get WiFi and more ports.

With additional SQM enabled, the ping time during maxed out downloads or uploads will improve a lot, close to the ping times of the idle case, but SQM will not further improve the situation on an idle connection. 5376163bf9

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