Forum Discussion
5G home internet speed after 15-day trial.
For the first two weeks of having 5G Home Internet I was getting download speeds from 250-400 Mbps down and 20-25 Mbps upload. I know they only advertise 35-115 Mbps download on their website. Has anyone else had a similar experience? Really good speeds until the 15-day trial ends and then it's slowed down.
This seems pretty shady. I've been testing every day for two weeks and consistently got above 200 Mbps download. Now the free trial is ending and the speeds slow down. I know it's not a signal issue because I get 250-400 Mbps download on my T-Mobile 5G phone. I feel like I've been baited into not cancelling before the free trial ends.
- W5IRRoaming Rookie
I am in the New Orleans area and the best download speed I have ever gotten was 130-180 Mbps. worse than that every few hours it drops to virtually zero - dial-up is faster! If I reset the gateway, it returns to 130 Mbps, but then a little later I get bumped down again. What kind of service is that? I used to have their 4G home internet and never had to reset the gateway.
I am very disappointed in their misleading advertising, but that is the name of the game today, all of the service providers have issues and lie about them.
What a wonderful world😜
- Cali_CatBandwidth Buddy
Check your advanced cell metrics to see which band you have for the 2nd signal with is the 5G one. N71 has approximately half the bandwidth of N41. Unfortunately, there is no way to "lock" these bands in firmware at this time so many users see different bands on a daily if not hourly basis. Moving your gateway can help keep your desired band longer. It's a lot of effort for sure.
- Cali_CatBandwidth Buddy
tactrix wrote:
Cali Cat wrote:
Check your advanced cell metrics to see which band you have for the 2nd signal with is the 5G one. N71 has approximately half the bandwidth of N41. Unfortunately, there is no way to "lock" these bands in firmware at this time so many users see different bands on a daily if not hourly basis. Moving your gateway can help keep your desired band longer. It's a lot of effort for sure.
I know, but that's something that should be included in the contract don't you think? I mean if you got cable internet they wouldn't say "oh you're only gonna have the speed we promised you ½ the day." This is the kind of stuff that makes people not want to ever deal with a company again.
Band locking is the top priority that I hope TMO adds for sure. To be fair to TMO, they are not guaranteeing any specific bandwidth and priced their service accordingly. For example, my TMO speeds vary from 200-400 mbps depending on time of day for $50. If want guaranteed 400 minimum download, I would have to sign up with Spectrum for $85 per month. The cheapest Spectrum option is 200 mbps at $65 per month. If Spectrum would just lower their 400 price to $65, I would probably switch back.
- iTinkeralotBandwidth Buff
I am assuming you have the Arcadyan gateway. Check your gateway cell metrics via http://192.168.12.1/TMI/v1/gateway?get=all and find out which 5g band(s) your gateway connects to. It would be helpful to know the cell metrics when the speed is faster or the slower. If you have the PCI value you can locate the cell with cellmapper.net and possibly obtain a better signal from the n41 band. If your gateway is in between the two towers and you are able to influence the signal lock you could get what you prefer. Another approach might be to use an external antenna to get a signal strength on the preferred cell signal. If you want to take advantage of the n41 band the 4X4 MIMO antenna would be needed. It is not an inexpensive solution but could provide the end result you would prefer. If you are considering the T-Mobile home internet solution seriously then the extra efforts can pay off. The videos by Nater Tater on YouTube are very helpful.
- tactrixRoaming Rookie
W5IR wrote:
I am in the New Orleans area and the best download speed I have ever gotten was 130-180 Mbps. worse than that every few hours it drops to virtually zero - dial-up is faster! If I reset the gateway, it returns to 130 Mbps, but then a little later I get bumped down again. What kind of service is that? I used to have their 4G home internet and never had to reset the gateway.
I am very disappointed in their misleading advertising, but that is the name of the game today, all of the service providers have issues and lie about them.
What a wonderful world😜
I think that’s the problem with companies these days, they promise 1 thing but do something completely different.
- MokiNewbie Caller
I'm a little past day 15 and haven't seen much difference in speed tests. My gateway is on band n71 so the most I've ever seen is ~170. You must have been on the faster 2500mhz band n41 to get your 250-400. Might just be the gateway placement and your seeing slower speeds because it's connected to n71?
Check yours via http://192.168.12.1/TMI/v1/gateway?get=all to find out which 5g band your on
- iTinkeralotBandwidth Buff
T-Mobile does NOT guarantee you will have access to the n41 band. They state the 35-115 as that would be more common on the n71 600 MHz band. Both are touted as 5G the n41 is the millimeter band range so it is faster. They deploy n71 to cover large areas and n41 where user density would be higher and it can handle more. It is about how the frequency characteristics can be used. It gets pretty technical so not going into that. I am not an expert but I have done extensive research and reading.
We would all like to be on the n41 band for the blazing speeds. You have to be within reach of the tower that has n41 to get it. If an n71 is deployed in an area and you are between the two and one signal dips and the other is preferred it can migrate over to the other tower and band. I never had the option, and probably will not have it here, for the n41 service. Put it into perspective. Where can you possibly get the same bandwidth with no upfront hardware costs, data cap, no contract, or fees and do it for $50/month and be able to walk away when you want to. When you find that with the guarantee of n41 delivery let me know.
- tactrixRoaming Rookie
I've had this exact experience today, I had between 170-250mb down and around 70mb up for the first 15 days. On day 16(today) my speed is down to between 30-80mb down and 13-20mb up, this is straight up ridiculous, because I'm surrounded by T-mobile towers, yet when I speedtest it keeps saying that the closest ping locations to me are in another state, which tells me that t-mobile is connecting me to a tower way WAY far away.
- tactrixRoaming Rookie
Cali Cat wrote:
Check your advanced cell metrics to see which band you have for the 2nd signal with is the 5G one. N71 has approximately half the bandwidth of N41. Unfortunately, there is no way to "lock" these bands in firmware at this time so many users see different bands on a daily if not hourly basis. Moving your gateway can help keep your desired band longer. It's a lot of effort for sure.
I know, but that's something that should be included in the contract don't you think? I mean if you got cable internet they wouldn't say "oh you're only gonna have the speed we promised you ½ the day." This is the kind of stuff that makes people not want to ever deal with a company again.
- tactrixRoaming Rookie
iTinkeralot wrote:
I am assuming you have the Arcadyan gateway. Check your gateway cell metrics via http://192.168.12.1/TMI/v1/gateway?get=all and find out which 5g band(s) your gateway connects to. It would be helpful to know the cell metrics when the speed is faster or the slower. If you have the PCI value you can locate the cell with cellmapper.net and possibly obtain a better signal from the n41 band. If your gateway is in between the two towers and you are able to influence the signal lock you could get what you prefer. Another approach might be to use an external antenna to get a signal strength on the preferred cell signal. If you want to take advantage of the n41 band the 4X4 MIMO antenna would be needed. It is not an inexpensive solution but could provide the end result you would prefer. If you are considering the T-Mobile home internet solution seriously then the extra efforts can pay off. The videos by Nater Tater on YouTube are very helpful.
I've watched his channel for a while now but the antennas aren't the issue, because I have great reception, the issue is it just switches to a lower band on its own, and those antennas don't provide band control. If T-mobile included band control in their options this would be a none issue.
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