Forum Discussion
I'll assume this test was at your outdated NIU to measure the signal from Cox before he did anything. If he didn't detect any problems, this would be an in-spec signal from Cox. This is good. I guess the power line wasn't affecting your signal after all.
Correct!
So your coaxial cable enters your house at the roof...into the attic...and down to the area of your desk? Hopefully this rerun fixed your problem but if it does reoccur, a new, more direct connection to your desk-area would be nice. Meaning, no routing through the attic. If you do replace this portion, notify your landlord, again, because there'll be some drilling.
Mostly correct, it does enter into the attic from the roof it seems, but from there it exits the attic via the openings at either end of the house, routes down the AC duct, under the siding, and to the jack on the wall.
Now let's rollback to BenS1's attempt. If you have a standalone modem, directly connect an Ethernet cable from the modem to a device and run a speed test. If you have...for example...a 150 Mbps plan, your results should be close to 150 Mbps. This will measure your bandwidth. Now you're good at uploading images, post the results of your speed test.
The speed tests are actually consistent with what I had before which is still good considering I am on the 150Mbps plan. I do wish Cox would provide more competitive Upload speeds though. 1MB is barely enough to upload a video anywhere in a convenient amount of time.
166 Mbps...goodness! You may want to verify your account because you might be on the 200 Mbps plan. I forget the incentive but I was on the 100 Mbps but Cox replaced it with the 150 Mbps plan.
The weird part was instead of Cox just putting me on the 150 Mbps plan, Cox "grandfathered" me to a 200 Mbps. Normally, I wouldn't have cared...50 more megabits...but I have an older router with only a 100 Mbps port. I can't even use the +50 Mbps let alone +100, so I just had Cox roll me back to the 150 Mbps plan and saved $10 per month.
On the other hand, if you actually are on the 150 Mbps plan, Cox is treating you well on both streams. You typed "1 MB" but meant 10, right?
- Jaeger4 years agoContributor
Yep I'm definitely on the 150Mbps preferred plan. As to the upload, yeah 1MBps which would translate to 10Mbps.
- Bruce4 years agoHonored Contributor III
My bad....you did type a "B" and not a "b."
So you were getting 166 Mbps all along...even with the recent problem?
The only thing I can surmise is the antiquated NIU, horrible wiring and the unnecessary splitters were weakening your signal.
- Jaeger4 years agoContributor
Yeah it typically fluctuated between 140Mbps and 170Mbps, usually staying between 150 and 160Mbps. So far everything the tech did seems to have helped immensely but going to be running WinMTR for most of the evening to make sure nothing crops up while I'm busy elsewhere.
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