It's a shame that you can't set the maximum fan speed for auto when in night mode. Fan speed 4 is a little high/noisy so would be good to be able choose the limit ourselves for certain more noise sensitive areas to only get to a Max of 3 say.

It's more about noise when on night mode. I'd prefer the limit to get to fan speed 3 rather than 4 as it's a little loud at 4 in a bedroom. 've had it riase the fan for 10 minutes only on night mode where it could have stayed at a low fan speed for not much longer time but remain quieter


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Well my wife just told me the air purifier is too loud at night in auto mode... So seems I may end up returning my devices as I can't control the maximum fan speed. I use these in a bedroom so it's important for night mode.

t seems that this feature is not likely to encorpriated any time soon as I havent seen any updates since owning so development is slow. Likely look at buying an air purifier that doesn't spike in the middle of the night and make too much noise.

Night sky photography is all about taking in as much light as possible. To get just the right exposure settings, put your camera into manual shooting mode. That way, you can adjust the shutter speed, ISO, and aperture independently.

Apparently the 6 had a 3M material in the number 5 over it which reflected 5 toward theadlights.

In daylight we saw 65. At night 5 was reflected toward the driver so we saw 55.

In other words, if you decide to keep your ISO at 100 and aperture at f/11, you might need a shutter speed of over 20 minutes. These settings are going to result in a much cleaner image file (less noise and better front-to-back sharpness) but the long shutter speed will result in star trails.

The 500 rule is a simple guideline you can use to calculate the maximum exposure time you can use before stars begin to blur. Is it perfect? No. But it gives a good indication of what shutter speed you can use with your current setup.

I play games on my PC, so having stable ping is preferable. Having good download speed is also awesome to have, as I need to frequently update some games or download others. The problem is that I have both of these, but not at the same time.

What I have tried: I have tried making my device the highest priority, in the case that the band with was being limited for my download speed. Nothing changed, and my download speed remained the same.

I have also noticed that there is an uplink speed limit configuration in QoS, but not a downlink speed configuration. My best guess about this issue is that enabling QoS is limiting how much band with is being allocated to my downlink (download) speed. But, without downlink configuration options, I can't tell.

Enabling QoS, especially on older routers, always slowed down or caused the speed to have a overhead cap. I think as time went one QoS got some tuning in this area however it has mostly always slowed bandwidth speed results. Nature of the beast.

I have also noticed that other devices, such as my phone or laptop, have 200mb download speed despite QoS being enabled. Both my phone and my laptop are not connected to the wifi via ethernet. Is it possible that this download speed limitation is the result of ethernet?

I have come across some articles saying the same thing, that QoS isn't necessary. I'd whole heartily agree, but my problem is that when it is enabled, I do benefit from QoS. My grievance in this situation is that the reason why I have higher internet speeds is mainly so that I can have better/steady connection quality in games. When I have QoS disabled, I get way more jitter in my ping then I do when it is enabled. For the sake of not having 10 mbps download speed, it's probably smarter to leave it disabled. I'm just wondering however, if there is a reason why QoS seemingly limits my download speed when its enabled. What's even stranger is that all my other devices that are connected to the wifi without an ethernet have perfectly fine download speeds with QoS enabled. Unfortunately, my desktop is not capable of wifi connection, so I can't test it off of ethernet. I can however, test my laptop with ethernet. So I will go run that test soon and post the results.

I've had FIOS gigabit for about 2 years and very rarely had a problem until about 2 weeks ago. I am now getting speeds as low as 30 mb at night. This is using the Verizon speedtest to the router. I'm using a wired connection and I've called Verizon support 4 times now. They acknowledge there is a problem, but they haven't done anything to fix it. I've rebooted and reset the router multiple times, which accomplishes nothing other than making me set up the wifi again.

They sent a technician here 2 days ago. He was pretty clueless. He changed the router, which didn't do anything. I suggested that maybe there's a capacity issue in my neighborhood because of everyone streaming at night, but he dismissed that suggestion and said I'm not sharing capacity with anyone, which I doubt very much, and said that my neighbors streaming would only affect my wifi speeds, so I don't think he knows too much about this.

I've searched this forum and haven't found any solutions and nothing recent, other than one thread suggesting that FIOS throttles the speed. Can anyone offer any insight into getting this fixed? I really hope I don't have to go back to cable (Optimum), because FIOS is generally much better. Thanks for any information that you can provide.

I've never seen any evidence that Verizon throttles FiOS bandwidth.


You didn't mention what speed you pay for. That would be helpful to know, also what model router you have and how it's connected to the ONT. There may be some suggestions we users can make if we know those details.


With the Verizon speed testing showing poor speeds to the router, that should get their support people to pay attention. The phone support folk are often the least helpful. I suggest you try their social media support team. Use @verizonsupport on Twitter or post over in They have a Facebook page, too, but I don't know what it is.

I've signed up for gigabit internet. When the technician was here he suggested changing the router. I didn't really think that's the problem since it's fine during the day, but I didn't want to argue with him, so I let him change it. I now have the G3100 router - I previously had the G1100. It hasn't made any difference as far as the slow internet, but I'm getting somewhat faster wifi speeds after turning off the self organizing network.

Just to be clear, I wasn't complaining about the wifi speeds - the testing that I was doing was using a desktop PC using a wired connection to the router. The router is connected to the ONT with a coax cable.

If you have gigabit, there must be an Ethernet cable between the ONT and router. You'll see it plugged into the WAN port on the router and the Ethernet jack on the ONT. A coax connection is needed only when TV service is (or was) used. You simply can't get speeds over 100Mbps out of a pure coax connection. If you really don't have Ethernet between the ONT and the router (which I doubt), that is the problem; but the tech should have seen that.


If you do have Ethernet between the ONT and router, definitely reach out to Verizon's social media support team and get them to look at your Verizon speed test results. They should pay attention to the router speed test.


Other things you can try are resetting the ONT and replacing the Ethernet cable with a known good cable.

A single GPON OLT port is good for 2.4Gbps down / 1.2 Gbps up. If they put too many gigabit users on a single port, performance suffers. They must have moved some connections around in the splitter cabinet to make sure there weren't too many gigabit users on the same OLT port.


Having the Verizon router speed test results were likely very useful in helping them see the issue.

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