Shaw Speedtest is a website you can use to measure the speed of your Internet connection. You can view your upload speeds and your download speeds with a Shaw speed test. Follow the steps below to run a speed test.

Remember that download speed is the rate that data travels from the Internet to a device in your home. Upload speed is the rate that data travels from a device in your home to the Internet. Learn more about Internet speeds.


Shaw Download Speed Test


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I have tried to run with WiFi only; run with WiFi on and ethernet cable plugged into the iMac from the Shaw Modem box; and also run with the ethernet cable only having my time capsule turned off to have no wifi.

Your Hitron CGNM-2250 is not a simple modem, but a combination modem and wireless router, also known as a wireless gateway device. Your Time Capsule (TC) is also a wireless router. Similar to the gateway except it does not include a built-in modem.

Each device's routing functions are enabled by default. One of those functions is called NAT. When two or more routers are connected in series with NAT enabled, you have what is known as a "double NAT" condition. This type of condition is inefficient and can lead to poor data transfer rates through both devices.

btw: my 2 iPhones and iPad are still running on the "my network" as it was the last 10 years under the Time Capsule. It's not running the "Shaw-xxxxxx-5G" although the Shaw-5G shows as a choice on the phone. I changed one iPhone to test the Shaw WiFi by entering the password give to me by Shaw. It seems to work but I don't know how to check wifi speed on the iPhone.

Ah, that is because each device is still broadcasting their own wireless network. You have a number of choices here, but to try to resolve the speed issue, I will recommend that you disable the wireless radios on the TC. That way only the Hitron will be providing your wireless network.

A few months back I upgraded to Fibre+ 300 and noticing that the speed tests for my desktop (running Windows 10) is much lower than my speed tests on my mobile devices (iPhone 8, iPad Pro). They all use wifi (the desktop is no where near a cable line) and are on the same 5 GHz network.

Previously I was able to attain > 200 Mbps on my desktop but that was mainly due to my old Netgear 6400 router and using the QoS settings (which Orbi does not allow for manually setting). However, it was all or nothing...anything on wifi would either be fast or slow together, not different between desktop and mobile on the same network and connected to the same 5 GHz band.

I found a newer firmware for my router and after the update the speeds seem to be much better. Interestingly enough, the speedtest.shaw.ca is still fluctuating with lower speeds, from between 140 on the low side and 230 on the upper side.

It's too bad that you cannot move the desktop computer to be in physical proximity to the cable-modem, and then repeat those speed tests. Or, if you have an active coaxial wall-port in the same room as the desktop computer, temporarily move the cable-modem, connect it to the wall-port, and rerun the speed tests.

I did the same tests for both desktop and wifi from the same distance (i.e. at my desk) so not sure that is proximity...which is why it seems to be an adapter issue/setting. Though I honestly suspect I will have quicker to be hard-wired, I could see if I can run a really long cable to the machine.

Does your desktop computer have an external antenna? If so, can it be pivoted to various orientations in a vertical plane, such as "12 o'clock", or "3" or "6" or "9". Also, in the horizontal plane, try pointing it towards the WiFi modem wherever it is, or pointing it at 90 degrees to the direction of the WiFi modem.

@stormdragon -- the Shaw Speed Test connects to a Shaw server in your city/town. All the other sites that you mention are many "hops" away on the Internet, which would cause lower numbers to be reported.

Also, while running the Shaw Speed Test, open the Windows Task Manager, and switch to the Performance tab, and click on the icon for your WiFi adapter, to show the instantaneous speeds of your WiFi adapter, not the "averaged" graph that the Shaw Speed Test is drawing.

A speed test is a measurement of the bandwidth being used by a particular device at that specific time, or in simple terms, the speed between your Shaw modem and the device you are performing the test on. To learn how to run a speed test, visit How do I run an Internet speed test?

Shaw speed test will calculate your ping, download speeds, and upload speeds. Measured in milliseconds, your ping refers to the latency of your connection - how fast your device connects to the network. The higher the number, the longer it takes to transmit data.

Download speed is the rate that data travels from the Internet to a device in your home, or how fast your network can receive data. When you stream music or shows, download files, or browse the Internet, you're downloading data.

Upload speed is the rate that the data travels from a device in your home to the Internet, or how fast your network can transmit data. When you send an email, post on a social network, or save files to Cloud storage, you're uploading data.

For the best results, you should perform the test using a device plugged directly into your modem with an ethernet cable. If that's not possible, stand within 10ft and in line of sight of you modem and connect to the 5GHz band, if available.

Your experience can change drastically depending on the type and technical specs of the device you're using - like when it was made, what type of network card is built-in, its processor speed, software and more. Depending on when a device was manufactured, it may not be able to reach the top speeds offered by your internet plan. This is true, regardless of whether the device is wired directly to the modem or operating in an ideal WiFi environment. Many devices made prior to 2015 are incapable of reaching speeds over 100 Mbps. Some devices lack the capability because high speeds aren't deemed necessary for use.

If you're unsure of your device's speed capabilities, we recommend that you check its technical specifications or contact the device's manufacturer about potential upgrades or updates that might improve its performance

The Shaw SpeedTest usually shows SLIGHTLY more speed than what your plan is offering, but I have difficulty believing that you are actually getting 30% more than what your cable-modem is provisioned for.

Open the Windows "Task Manager", select the "Performance" tab, and minimize it. Launch the Shaw SpeedTest, and switch back to that window. Is your "CPU" showing at 100% busy -- you need a fast computer to actually run the test as its full speed. Is your "Network" showing the current download speed?

For the record, anyone looking to Upgrade to Gigabit, I have noticed little improvement to my service from 300. I use upto 6 devices (5 wireless, 1 hardwired) simultaneously in my home. Though I would say there may be a placebo effect of more consistent speed across all my devices.

I kind of have the same issue. My connection is only 200-450mbps on speedtest.net, fast.com and googlespeedtest. I have tried WiFi AX and I have hooked to the modem with a cat8 cable good for 48 Gbps, Windows says I have a 1 Gbps connection to the modem doesn't matter what cable I hook up or even on WiFi AX. Phone Shaw and they said my connection is good, I dont believe them because 6 months ago I had Internet 600 and when I tested that is was always between 550-650 depending on the day.

I recommend that you contact Shaw (either live-chat or telephone), for them to trouble-shoot possible issues, in no particular order:

1.failing network-adapter inside your computer,

2.out-of-date device-driver software for the network-adapter,

3.inadequate Ethernet cable between your computer and your BlueCurve (OK for 600, but not for 1000? Try a different one?),

4.power brown-out affecting the cable-modem (plug it directly into a wall-socket, not a power-bar?),

5.failing coaxial-cable from the cable-modem either to a coaxial-splitter or a coaxial wall-port (try a different cable?)

6.inadequate in-the-wall coaxial cable inside your home (OK at 300, but not good-enough for 1000?),

7.failing coaxial-splitter inside Shaw's demarcation-box on the outside of your home (only a Shaw technician can open the box to replace it),

8.problematic coaxial-cable from the demarcation-box to the telephone-pole (one person here reported that Shaw found too much tension on the cable -- replacing the cable solved that person's problem),

9.problem up-and-down the street (got any nearby neighbours with "Fibre+ Gig" who are also having problems?).

10.got another enabled cable-outlet in your home? Can you try connecting to it?

11.got any "signal-amplifier" hooked-up? Can you bypass it?

12.got any coaxial-splitter between the cable-modem and the cable-outlet? Can you bypass it?

13.Shaw can remotely logon to your cable-modem, and measure the signal-strength. Ask them to do so.

14.Check that your coaxial-cables are tightly-screwed on. Avoid decades-old "push-on" cables. 152ee80cbc

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