I've got bt arriving next Friday to fit the 1 gig after my 500mb Internet connection with virgin started playing up (occasional lag) basically I'm curious as to how reliable and how fast the 1 gig connection is. I've got a friend who is on WiFi with the bt 1 gig but only gets 200mb down on his ps4 but he does live out of the way and is a good distance from the router. My set up is that I have 2 ps5s hooked up via a cat 6 Ethernet not both are always in use infant only the one is generally as my partner rarely gets on hers across the room. Then I have 6 or 7 devices I use WiFi on such as a Google tablet, mobile phones, Google doorbell. For the sake of 5 quid I thought I'd upgrade from virgin 500mb to bts fibre to the premises 900mb connection. Is it worth it?
Assuming, you will be at Full Fibre area, whilst talking about 1 Gig package, and you mean in fact Full Fibre 900 package to be activated for you from BT:
Any such services are in principle CONTENDED and real performance will be really dependant on concrete environment and network as round yourself. But this is something, what you really know, isn’t it?
BT do not provide guaranteed speed in term, as your speed will be 900 Mbps/110 Mbps all the time, it’s almost impossible guarantee that.
What wifi will guarantee to yourself is connection between Exchange and your ONT/BT Super Hub 2.
This guarantee will be either 450 Mbps or 700 Mbps Download and 10 Mbps upload.
Yes, you read right, upload speed is absolute non guaranteed at all.
But before you start panic, my real world experience on my own FF900 is as I have most of the time 900+ Mbps (with occasional 1.1-1.2 Gbps) download and very stable 110-117 Mbps upload.
In very rare occasions, my download dropping down to 700+ Mbps and upload to 90+ Mbps.
To be fair, at previous building, which is only few meters away, I had much more fluctuation on speed end, whilst network was really on capacity on PON. But even like that, never dropped under 500 Mbps down and 90 Mbps up.
At a moment, PON, on which I am connected has a spare ports, and is not fully loaded, but less then 20 users. And even that results to some contended competition about bandwidth.
However, it’s not speed so much, what you looking for, and again, You probably know it.
My unloaded ping is in terms of 3 ms to 8 ms and loaded from 12 to 55 ms on Fast.com test.
On Speedtest by Ookla, all way down from NE to London 11.6 ms, and to Amsterdam about 15 ms.
Not tested game servers and respective pings, and jitters, but might imagine, as there will be similar results, due asymmetric nature of OpenReach / BT Fibre network.
Previously I had another provider at different area of city, with symmetrical 200/200 Mbps speed and ping 2-3 ms, but that’s something I can’t have here, whilst they do not cover private residential buildings. Even CF is not at our building on their own infrastructure, even less then 200 yards from us lying their optical network.
Unfortunately nature of leased lines, which OpenReach see as good money miner, means, as residential / SME customers will stay a long time on asymmetric network and with all that problems with that.
When talking about problems, you as gamer might had a little more expectations, then typical, even heavy user like myself, and find little problems quite big for yourself. Still, you have chance cancel contract in 14 days, then let’s see, how it will play for yourself.
I'm taking it that your friend has a newer PS4 then cos the WiFi card in the original ones was a bit poor. Mine max'd out at 45mbps over WiFi on 160mbps connection. Still only got 100mbps on ethernet and the router was in the same room as the console
My PS5 will quite happily max out out our WiFi at 140mbps in the current house.
That doesn't fill me with much confidence if that's the only speed you are getting.
That worries me slightly I was told over the phone I'm guaranteed no less than 700 down and 110 up I was hoping I'd be getting close to 900 down all the time considering the router and console will be next to each other connected via a cat 6. Basically the answer I'm looking for are to these questions.
I'm paying 45 pounds for virgin 500mb 40 up this will increase to 70 in May as I'm out of contract. should I notice better performance in terms of downloads etc?
How reliable are BT in peoples experience?. I'm having problems with occasional lag now but for two years virgin have been good for me very rarely going down and I do get around 520 down consistently.
I sorted "Internal" competition in simple way:
- less hungry / legacy devices are allowed only on 2.4 GHz
- standard devices connects to SSID on lower 5 GHz band (channel 64 / 80 MHz bandwidth)
- hungry devices has own designated higher 5 GHz Wifi band (channel 124 / 80 MHz bandwidth)
and usually has now on lower 5 GHz download around 450 Mbps
, and on higher band 500+ Mbps,
Plus PC connected hard wired (full up to 1.2 Gbps)
Not possible on standard BT Super Hub 2, you will need aftermarket WiFi AP, my choice was 3 band AC router (not enough devices to sacrifice AX and WiFi 6)
Here's what I plan to do.
Have two ps5s which are in the same room connected via a cat 6 ethernet.
WiFi devices connected will be
2 mobile phones
1 google nest home tablet.
1 google doorbell
Then I have plans to get more smart devices such as smart blinds and bulbs.
Will this be possible without buying more equipment and the speed/performance won't be affected either will it?
Be fair, many smart bulbs and Newer Nest equipment from Google is speed enough to not really sow you down...
Only if you have very very legacy (old, more then 3-5+ years) equipment like Chinese led strips, or so, then it's good idea to "isolate them" on 2.4 GHz, but in general they will probably not able to do anything else then 2.4 anyway
Aftermarket router could potentially enhance things, but it's always about personal decisions and planning...
With SH2 from BT you will be able have on WiFi end reasonable speed 200-350 Mbps eventually, and most hungry devices are always (when possible) better to chain over the Lan cables hard wires...
Only if you will feels, it's bit enough, then coming question: what will help?
And only at this point will become real question: which router it's good for me, and will I be able to use it in full, or not?