New Super Fast Fibre, time to get full speed

Skeeter1600e
Contributor
Contributor

Hi  all,

 

today I had super fast fibre connect, the 1.6gb busy home package, it went live at around 16:30 or so.

 

Running speed tests on both Fast.com and the Ookla app is showing an average of around 400/500mb on my iPhone and significantly less on my iPad. I can accept the differences between the devices (will look at the iPad later) but even so this is massively less than I was expecting.

 

Does a brand new install take time to settle down before it starts delivering the speed I thought I was getting?

thanks

eta fixed ipad discrepancy so now running at same as iPad

20 REPLIES 20
JimM11
Brilliant Contributor
Brilliant Contributor

@Skeeter1600e When you say you had super fast fibre, was there an engineer visited and swapped over the old ONT to the New ONT. You can head to the router manager http://192.168.1.254 the wan sync should say 2.4gb/s speed in the status tab. Wireless testing that by the sound of what you are doing, you need to connect an ethernet cable to get speed test done as a base test, you do not even say what router you have from EE?

Mustrum
EE Community Star
EE Community Star

@Skeeter1600e   also, what model iPhone/iPad?

Openreach did the connection today with brand new equipment as we have never had full fibre to the property before, so a new out of the box ONT.

 

The EE supplied router is a Smart Hub Pro.

 

The WAN Link Speed is showing as 2.44 Gbps

JimM11
Brilliant Contributor
Brilliant Contributor

@Skeeter1600e Will wait to the ethernet answer, and also question from @Mustrum, and do you have the smart wireless connected also?

Skeeter1600e
Contributor
Contributor

iPhone 16 Pro

iPad air 2 (should be able to handle c850mb)

re Ethernet test, will need to go and dig my laptop out for that which hasn’t been used for sometime.

yes I have the smart Wi-Fi pro device plugged in and paired, showing a solid blue light, although I can’t see a separate Wi-Fi name being broadcast so assume it doesn’t do that unlike something like a Netgear type extender.

as an aside, my PS4 is reporting connection speeds of 48mbps

JimM11
Brilliant Contributor
Brilliant Contributor

@Skeeter1600e Wifi average is 70% of reported full speed, WiFi 5 is therefore circ 500-600mb/s.

16 Pro should fly...

Turn the smart wifi off just now incase of speed issue!

Skeeter1600e
Contributor
Contributor

Thanks, excuse the possibly dumb question, is 70% of 1.6gb still around 1Gb rather than the 500 - 600 you mention?

JimM11
Brilliant Contributor
Brilliant Contributor

@Skeeter1600e You said 850 which is wifi 5 device, ie the ipad i think you meant.

WiFi devices range from 70,150, 300, 850, 1700, 2400. you cannot go faster, with a slower device...

Your PS4 is probably right speed if it is set on the 2.4Ghz band.

You may have to let the laptop settle and do any patches/upgrades that it will want to do when it is connected to the ethernet since you say its not been on for a while.

JimM11
Brilliant Contributor
Brilliant Contributor

@Skeeter1600e Some BT info regarding fibre etc.

1. FTTP is a contended service, up to 32 users can be sharing the 2.5Gb backhaul, so you can never expect the full speed all the time, you may get 900mb when there are fewer people using it. I expect that you are sharing the backhaul with many users. If everyone was using it fully, you may only get 78mbs. Its called statistical multiplexing, which relies on the fact that all users are not utilising their connection fully, all of the time.

BT quote up to 900mb, so you are likely to get much less than that during peak times.

Speed tests pass very little data, so normally give a much higher speed.

2. The max OR connect to a splitter is 30 ( 32 is the splitter maximum but policy is 30 ) not every CBT port provided is likely to have a customer using it , so unless on a ‘new site’ that has no alternatives to OR FTTP the actual number on a splitter is likely to be way less , OR currently have about a 30% take up, so maybe 10 users per splitter , plus the majority don’t take 900Mb but slower profiles , and the chances of those ‘on line ‘ at any one time all and doing something intensive, rather than browsing / Netflix that may be consuming less than 30-100Mb , is slim , that’s why there is a 700Mb minimum speed guarantee on 900Mb …..the 2.4Gb will be plenty ,you would have to be incredibly unlucky to have any consistent congestion.

If you suspect PON congestion, try at a time when there won’t be much activity, late evening or early morning .


Although you have tried somethings to ‘ isolate’ the problem , the most obvious thing to do ( that you haven’t apparently tried ) is use the BT router , without doing that , you haven’t really proved anything , your third party router may great , but even great routers can be mis configured or faulty