Myself and my neighbour have the same bt full fibre package with the exact same set up. Running a speed test they get 5ms but when I run a speed test on my network I get 30ms.
we have disconnected all devices to ensure its a fair test. Considering we are the only 2 people connected to full fibre on our pole, and we have the same package and provider, why is my ping 30ms and my neighbour is much lower at 5ms?
Any one of a number of reasons. To assume your ping will be the same as you neighbour’s is a bit like assuming traffic conditions will be the same for both of you when you drive into town. Even on the same road, a few minutes apart, it won’t be, of course.
Anything under 50ms is considered acceptable. People obsess about ping far too much. Human reaction times are about a 1/12 of a second or 85ms, so you’re not going to see the difference between 30 & 5. I’d be more concerned if it was varying a lot.
"Running a speed test they get 5ms but when I run a speed test on my network I get 30ms."
How exactly are you both running these speed tests?
Are you both using wired ethernet devices, (not WiFi), of a similar specification, using the same speed test website and if selectable, the same distant server, and at a similar time of day?
***EDIT***
@WSHwrote:
"Anything under 50ms is considered acceptable. People obsess about ping far too much. Human reaction times are about a 1/12 of a second or 85ms, so you’re not going to see the difference between 30 & 5."
I have recently moved to Zen Internet FTTP via CityFibre. For historical reasons I have for many years kept a spreadsheet of my broadband's performance. I still do a daily speedtest on Ookla to Zen's London server. My download latency always measure somewhere between 100 and 200miliseconds! As we are not gamers, we don't notice it.
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