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Message 11 of 48

Re: So....throttling...

Tried Google's DNS...no change.

Still maxes at 3MB/s

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Message 12 of 48

Re: So....throttling...

So....this is interesting.

Just started a trial of NordVPN and my download speeds from the same server are 15/16 times faster. Instead of downloading at 3MB/s I am now downloading at around 45-50MB/s.

If this isn't throttling or another type of traffic control, then what is it?

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Message 13 of 48

Re: So....throttling...

In message 1, you said " I just tried a different VPN, one that I don't often use, and it jumped to to around the same 20-30MB/s."

In message 12, you said "Just started a trial of NordVPN and my download speeds from the same server are 15/16 times faster. Instead of downloading at 3MB/s I am now downloading at around 45-50MB/s."

I suspect you 've answered the question yourself but you could try a free trial with 3rd VPN provider to confirm

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Message 14 of 48

Re: So....throttling...

The first VPN trial was with one of those cheap ones. You know the type...lifetime VPN for £30. But as I tested more, I was getting very flaky performance. Some allowed nothing, some were about 10MB/s and it was rare to get the 20-30MB/s I saw early on.

On that basis, though I would try with a better VPN like Nord. And...yep...tried two large files now and both were downloading at up to 50MB/s.
There may well be another explanation....but I can't think of it. So, Occam's Razor. BT are doing something!

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Message 15 of 48

Re: So....throttling...

Hello,

Could just be a bad route. There are many times where the route traffic takes goes through a router that is having issues. First thing I would do is run an MTR trace route test from a Linux machine at your location to the server IP Address and see if there is a router along the route losing packets - happens all the time. The reason a VPN you are using won't have the same issue is that the VPN may well take a different route as it is going to the VPN's server, and only then releasing your traffic into the wild, which would then take a route from VPN Server to your hosted Server.

I suppose you could see it like you taking your car to work and always going the same route that has pot holes in the road. Instead you take the VPN bus that goes a different route and drops you off, and you then can walk a new route to work from the drop off point.

So worth checking as it might not be BT themselves, but might just be a point between the two points you are trying to go between (you and hosted server) which is not necessarily under BT control, and nothing you or they could do anything about anyway. In my line of work I see this all the time as I work for a bespoke VPN company.

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Message 16 of 48

Re: So....throttling...

Thanks for the response. That is a possibility.

I'd like to think that this would have been resolved over time, but it has been a couple of weeks since the server was set up. We were originally using Nextcloud, now Seafile, and that was working fine for all the time it was being used. Not that this matters but it had to be changed because of hard-drive failure and Nextcloud's unwillingness to support external drives.

I still should have an open complaint with BT so let's see whether that amounts to anything.

Don't have a Linux machine here...but I do appreciate the response! Thanks again.

 

 

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Message 17 of 48

Re: So....throttling...

DNS translates readable addresses to IP (and a little bit more), once the connection is made it won't do anything to speed up or slow down your data rates.
*There are a few exceptions where BT DNS will point you to content servers within their own network, but it's rare and commercial stuff only.


I only learn by making mistakes and owning up to them - boy do I learn a lot!
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Message 18 of 48

Re: So....throttling...

Clearly your VPN service provider's server is acting as a bottleneck.  Probably oversubscrbed.  Pay cheap, get cheap.

Oh, and I'd fully agree with Crimliar.  DNS has nothing to do with connection speed.

 

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Message 19 of 48

Re: So....throttling...

I'll recap on my experiences...

BT (no VPN) - 3MB/s

Cheap VPN - 0MB/s up to 30MB/s

Nord VPN - 40-50MB/s

Even with the cheap VPN download speeds from the server, it is often much much better than using BT network.

As for DNS, I was only responding to someone offering advice. I tested the hypothesis, and it didn't make any difference. I don't think this needs mentioning again.

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Message 20 of 48

Re: So....throttling...

Sorry, misread message 14.