Forum Discussion
how to improve signal and speed on home internet¿
I'm only getting about 25 to 45 Mbps down and similar up. I keep seeing people get in the 200s down! How can I get those kind of speeds? I'm not very far from a tower and I've tried the Nokia Gateway all over the house!
- djb14336Bandwidth Buddy
Remember, when dealing with signal values they are typically negative numbers. So -89db can be an order of magnitude better than -92db.
- H0GGZ1LLARoaming Rookie
Primary Signal B2
RSRP -108dBm
SNR 2dB
RSRQ -13dB
RSSI -77dBm
Secondary Connection n71
RSRP -92dBm
SNR 12dB
RSRQ -12dB
- djb14336Bandwidth Buddy
Yeah... need to dial in better numbers for the 4g side. That is going to dramatically limit the symbol rate it allows. Those 5g numbers on a straight 4g line would easily get you symbol rates that could break 100 by 30 provided there wasn't a lot of congestion.
You may want to try some tests to some other destinations too to get a better idea of how things look. The screwy CGNAT/XLAT464 tunneling they do (sort of like a VPN) can really screw up geolocstion and routing stuff. The "closest" location that those tests tend to select can be pretty bad... Laden with congestion.
Mine will pick spots in NC/GA (I am in SC), and often may come in around 60/15... but I can test 80/20 or better to Seattle (CenturyLink) or somewhere off the wall like Montréal or Toronto.
In other words, sometimes it isn't the wireless bogging you down, but the congestion, be that localized traffic or the routing/peering further upstream
- djb14336Bandwidth Buddy
May want to focus more on the "quality" indexes. Can have a "good" quality connection at 105 RSRP, provided the other indexes are strong.
The more usable headroom within the wave form, the better the CQI value can calculate, which impacts the symbol rate it will try to run.
I can get the same throughput at 90 as I can at 96, provided the noise and other metrics stay strong.
- BlueSurfTransmission Trainee
You have nothing to lose but to try. I sent my "can" back, a few days later my brother got one around the corner and he got great numbers. I re-ordered it. Meanwhile I watched every video on the net and I called T-Mobile and was transferred to a T-Mobile engineer, he told me the "can" doesn't like being in a window or direct sunlight, keep it away. My kitchen has 2 windows and putting it higher was the game changer. If you have a tall piece of furniture in your living room or dining room give it a try. It just may be perfect or close.
- 007BondMI6Bandwidth Buddy
H0GGZ1LLA wrote:
I'm only getting about 25 to 45 Mbps down and similar up. I keep seeing people get in the 200s down! How can I get those kind of speeds? I'm not very far from a tower and I've tried the Nokia Gateway all over the house!
It does not matter how far you are from the tower what matters is signal quality.
Phone app is a bit limited go to 192.168.12.1 on your computer web browser.
First page expand Primary and secondary internet connection signal all that info is needed screen shot ok too.
Then on the left click Status and again expand Primary and secondary cellular network again all that data or screenshot.
Again need
RSRP
SNR
RSRQ
RSSI
For both primary and secondary.
And Band for both.
With this info we can help you.
RSRP the lower the number the better.
SNR higher is better on this one.
RSRQ lower is better.
RSSI lower is better.
- H0GGZ1LLARoaming Rookie
- H0GGZ1LLARoaming Rookie
- H0GGZ1LLARoaming Rookie
- 007BondMI6Bandwidth Buddy
H0GGZ1LLA wrote:
Primary Signal B2
RSRP -108dBm This is bad you want to get this in the low -90’s
SNR 2dB This is also not good aim to get this at the least 7+
RSRQ -13dB This is ok
RSSI -77dBm Not good needs to be lower
Secondary Connection n71
RSRP -92dBm OK would be nice if it was lower but ok
SNR 12dB decent
RSRQ -12dB ok
So the thing is this crazy gateway needs the 4G LTE to kinda also be solid to hold on to the 5G.
So don't worry about the bars try to figure out where the 4G tower is and the 5G tower is and then get a spot where you improve those Primary reading without making the secoday any worse.
Example my home the 5G tower is 3 miles SW where the 4G tower is .5 miles W. To make matters worse there is a slower 5G tower only 2 miles NW. So my goal was to lock onto the faster 5G to the SW get on the 4G to the W good and totally avoid the 5G to the NW. Not an easy task but I did find a spot that did the trick. You can also call TMHI tech and just ask where the towers are what bands they have they will give you the addresses. Then use Google maps to plot the best angles to your home so you get an ideal of the best spots to test.
BTW with that n71 depending on how far it is the most you can hope for is 200+ down as that is where those towers max out normally. But still that's better than what you are getting you just need to work on those reading and get some improvement.
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