**New** Test your broadband speed

This would be great if it actually did anything?
I enter my landline number including code click test then wait and wait and wait....... when do I get my results?
Seems a mistake for me to have reported the lid hanging off the DP opposite as before I was getting 17Mb download, since the lid was replaced (after 10 days) I've been only getting 7Mb
Tonight with speedtest.net I'm getting a ping of 175ms and a 2.7Mb download so hence my need to check it with the BT sppedtest.
I'm  on Infinity 2 unlimited
£26 per month - not good BT

I agree with the OP,reporting anything can be fatal.
It would be fine if the repair work done did not effect anyone`s lines and conections,but that is not the case unfortunately.
And the BT Wholesale tester always gives me the wrong readings,high ping readings,low upload etc,it is useless.
Then it just copys those bad results to the server and shows them using java code.
To prove the point speedtest.net always shows better results [depending on the server used],but unfortunately BT only count the results given by the Wholesale tester].
I am now at 66Mbps due to the DLM being confused by the slightest blit in the power and my profile has dropped from 77.44 to 67.33.
And the worst thing is that as customers we can`t do anything about it,except leave.

Similar Messages

  • New contract, new hub, same broadband speed.

    Went online to look at my broadband options - it suggested I could get 12-17MB/s on a new contract.
    So I rang and got a new contract. The new hub arrived, works great.
    Now, when I go online to bt.com and run the speed estimator, it suggests I could get only 12MB/s. OK this is right at the bottom end of the initial range, but fair enough.
    However, the actual BT broadband speed test says I'm only getting 7.9MB/s - exactly the same as I got before the new contract.
    So, my question is, should I actually expect a greater speed? Is BT providing a newer, upgraded form of VDSL? I mean, is there some technical reason why I could expect a greater speed?
    (edit) OK I've done a bit of self-help... see some results below. Doesn't help me but maybe somebody can make use of this information. And yes of course I tried the speed test again and it didn't make any difference.

    you are on broadband with fibre vdsl which is the same as infinity but because your speed estimate was <15mb BT do not sell infinity where speed is <15Mb but you get broadband with fibre instead.  this is still fibre to the cabinet and copper from cabinet to your home - just the same as infinity.
    this is the second post recently where the estimate was the checker 'A' speeds but the reality is your line is not good enough for 'A' so you have somewhere between 'A' and the 'B' speed
    the diagnostic test normally does work but sometimes you need to try a few times
    If you like a post, or want to say thanks for a helpful answer, please click on the Ratings star on the left-hand side of the post.
    If someone answers your question correctly please let other members know by clicking on ’Mark as Accepted Solution’.

  • Broadband Speed dropped suddenly

    Hi There,
    Since the New Year our broadband speed has dropped from 1mbps to 0.1mbps. At that point our land line also stopped working totally however we have had an engineer around to repair the landline. He came to the conclusion that there was internal wiring in the master socket causing it to short circuit.  He literally ripped the wires out of the master socket. This made the landline work again. The broadband speed is still running very slowly causing great frustration. 
    It's a home hub 3
    Here are the results of the speed test I just carried out
    Test1 comprises of Best Effort Test:  -provides background information.
    Download  Speed
    101 Kbps
    0 Kbps
    250 Kbps
    Max Achievable Speed
     Download speedachieved during the test was - 101 Kbps
     For your connection, the acceptable range of speeds is 50-250 Kbps.
     Additional Information:
     Your DSL Connection Rate :1568 Kbps(DOWN-STREAM), 448 Kbps(UP-STREAM)
     IP Profile for your line is - 135 Kbps
    I am expecting to get at least 1mbps. Any ideas what the problem could be? I don't think it is any equipment. I Have tried the test socket and i recieve the same results
    Solved!
    Go to Solution.

    32.9db gives me IP profile of 6500kbps but im getting an IP profile of only 1250 kbps. Is this because of high noise margins?
    ADSL Settings
    VPI/VCI:
    0/38
    Type:
    PPPoA
    Modulation:
    G.992.1 Annex A
    Latency type:
    Interleaved
    Noise margin (Down/Up):
    16.3 dB / 28.0 dB
    Line attenuation (Down/Up):
    32.9 dB / 17.0 dB
    Output power (Down/Up):
    17.8 dBm / 12.2 dBm
    FEC Events (Down/Up):
    44142631 / 18
    CRC Events (Down/Up):
    1833 / 13
    Loss of Framing (Local/Remote):
    0 / 0
    Loss of Signal (Local/Remote):
    0 / 0
    Loss of Power (Local/Remote):
    0 / 0
    HEC Events (Down/Up):
    3411 / 19
    Error Seconds (Local/Remote):
    2043 / 35

  • S-L-O-W Broadband speed

    For several weeks now my broadband has been running extremely slowly.  At times it was down to 'dial up' speeds!  I tried to do an on-line speed check.  Last night it returned a 'theoretical' broadband speed of 17.8Mb/s - above the expected 15Mb/s.
    I then went on the next stage to check the ADSL speed.  This came up with 'There are 4 threads!' What does this mean? It then went on to test the Broadband speed and came up with errors on all four occasions I attempted this.  This morning, I couldn't even get the 'pre-test' 17.8Mb/s result to work.  Can you help?

    Could you post your router stats and a BT speed test?
    The 4 threads thing is normal.
    If my post was useful please rate it by clicking the star on the left hand side. If my post solved your problem please mark it as solved.
    I hope that's okay for you,
    arobertson545.
    SpeedTouch 585v6

  • Broadband speed pegged to 2Mb/s

    Since transferring to BT broadband last week from Be my internet speed has dropped from 8-10Mb/s to 1.94Mb/s.
    Several attempts with the chat line and telephone support have failed to achieve any improvement.
    The BT speed check shows exchange to router speed of 8.13Mb/s wifi speed 1.94 Mb/s IP Profile of line 2Mb/s
    Why am I being limited when I was promised no fall off in service?

    Hi Yorky,
    This is a BT Retail Customer to Customer help forum. The only BT presence are the BT Care Team (Forum Mods).
    Sorry to hear you're having problems with you BT Retail Services.
    You will either be on the ADSLMax (upto 8mbps) service or if your exchange has been BTw 21cn upgraded you maybe on the ADSL2/2+ (upto 12/20mbps) service depending on your line quality and length.
    However these upto speeds may not be the speeds you will get as ADSL broadband connections are very dependent on the distance from your property to the exchange and the quality of your line. The further away you are from your local exchange the slower your broadband speed will be.
    1) Can you please run a BT speed test (including IP Profile) http://speedtester.bt.com (not beta version)[Best done with a wired, Ethernet, connection] After Quick Test is done you need to click "Further Diagnostics" to get IP Profile.
    2) is there any noise on your line. dial 17070 option2 ,called quite line test, from landline phone. Should be silent but slight hum normal on cordless phone.
    3) please post adsl line statistics 
    ADSL Line Statistic Help:
     If you have a BT Home Hub like the one below...
    Then:
     1) Go to http://192.168.1.254 or http://bthomehub.home
     2) click Settings
     3) Click Advanced Settings
     4) Click Broadband
     5) Click Connection or sometimes called ADSL (see picture Below)
    The direct Address is http://bthomehub.home/index.cgi?active_page=9116 (for bthomehub3.A firmware ending in 1.3)
    or http://bthomehub.home/index.cgi?active_page=9118 (for bthomehub3.A firmware ending in 94.1.11)
    You will need to copy and past all the adsl line statistics ( Including HEC, CRC and FEC errors). You may need to click " More Details"
    There are more useful links on Keith's website here: If you have an ADSL connection, please select this link
    Don't have a BT Homehub/Voyager?
    • http://192.168.0.1 for a netgear router and look for ADSL adsl statistics with information like noise margin and line attenuation, connection speed
    • http://192.168.2.1 for a belkin router and look for ADSL adsl statistics with information like noise margin and line attenuation, Data Rate
    To me it sound like your on ADSLMax (upto 8mbps) service though your ip profile could be stuck at 2mbps but you need to supply all the above information to proceed.
    Hope thy helps,
    cheers.
    I'm no expert, so please correct me if I'm wrong

  • Variable Broadband Speed

    I've never had fast speeds with our Broadband as we're at the end of our exchange line (about 1.8 Mbps) but a few months ago I received an email from BT that stated that our exchange would get an upgrade which would mean that we might get a more reliable and maybe faster Broadband connection. Lo and behold our speed then increased to about 2.4-2.6 Mbps which meant that we were now able to enjoy iplayer, Youtube etc without buffering and I could also think about subscribing to BT Vision. Unfortunately over the last month or so the Broadband speed has varied from speeds around 0.24, 0.9, 1.5 and maximum 2.4 Mbps. I have tried all of the obvious troubleshooting ideas such as restarting the Home Hub 3, checking connections, internal wiring and microfilters, trying an alternative modem etc. We dont have a master socket so I'm not able to do that check. Any help will be appreciated.

    Hi,
    Sorry to hear that your having problems with your BT Broadband
    You will either be on the ADSLMax (upto 8mbps) service or if your exchange has been BTw 21cn upgraded you maybe on the ADSL2/2+ (upto 12/20mbps) service depending on your line quality and length.
    However these upto speeds may not be the speeds you will get as ADSL broadband connections are very dependent on the distance from your property to the exchange and the quality of your line. The further away you are from your local exchange the slower your broadband speed will be.
    To enable the community to help you please see the advice below:
    Please see Keith's help guide here: Helping forum members to help you, it will go through some checks that are needed for us to help you.
    A summary of the checks are:
    1a) Is your router/Homehub connected by a BT NTE5 master socket, Adsl Filtered Master Socket or Extension Socket?   Please bear in mind that extension cables and extension sockets can reduce the broadband's performance. If you have an Old LJU master socket then please say.
    1b) Have you tried the Test Socket? - if you have one.
    2) Can you please run a BT speed test (including IP Profile) http://speedtester.bt.com (not beta version)[Best done with a wired, Ethernet, connection] If the other link doesn't work you can try http://speedtest.btwholesale.com/ (also do further diagnostics)
    3) is there any noise on your line. dial 17070 option2 ,called quite line test, from landline phone. should be silent but slight hum normal on cordless phone.
    4) please post adsl line statistics 
    ADSL Line Statistic Help:
     If you have a BT Home Hub like the one below...
     Then:
     1) Go to http://192.168.1.254 or http://bthomehub.home
     2) click Settings
     3) Click Advanced Settings
     4) Click Broadband
     5) Click Connection or sometimes called ADSL (see picture Below)
    The direct Address is http://bthomehub.home/index.cgi?active_page=9116 (for bthomehub3.A firmware ending in 1.3)
    or http://bthomehub.home/index.cgi?active_page=9118 (for bthomehub3.A firmware ending in 94.1.11)
    You will need to copy and past all the adsl line statistics ( Including HEC, CRC and FEC errors). You may need to click " More Details"
    There are more useful links on Keith's website here: If you have an ADSL connection, please select this link
    Don't have a BT Homehub/Voyager?
    • http://192.168.0.1 for a netgear router and look for ADSL adsl statistics with information like noise margin and line attenuation, connection speed
    • http://192.168.2.1 for a belkin router and look for ADSL adsl statistics with information like noise margin and line attenuation, Data Rate
     cheers
    I'm no expert, so please correct me if I'm wrong

  • Is Vision Supposed to Slow Your Broadband?

    I have just got BT Vision the other day, before it was installed my broadband speed was consistently between 3.5mbps and 4mbps, even during peak times.
    But since installing BT Vision my speed has dropped to around 1.3mbps and 2mbps. No one at BT told me Vision would decrease my broadband speed, if they had I probably wouldn’t have bothered with it.
    I called the helpdesk on 0800 111 4567 and the girl said to press the reset button (little red one) on the side of my Home Hub 2.0 but it has made no difference.
    Has anyone else had similar problems like this?

    Icarus5000 wrote:
    Thanks, just come off the phone to Sales as I wanted the Gold Package for my Vision. He said the same, that Vision takes about 1.6mbps off your broadband speed but only until your line re-syncs itself, apparantly.?
    When the on-demand session is finished, the Vbox signals that it's finished and the QOS reserved bandwidth is automatically released, usually within a couple of minutes at most for me - no resync necessary.
    I will give it 10days as I did need to unplug my Home Hub to connect the power line adaptors, the line may just need to restabalise?
    What does the speedtester say ?

  • Will a new router increase my broadband speed in this configuration

    How much (if at all) can I increase my broadband speed by getting a faster router. Here's my config:
    DSL line --> DSL modem --> Lynksys BEFSR41 Router --> Ethernet cat-5 wiring in house --> TimeCapsule WiFi
    The computers using this network are an Intel iMac (10.6), a PowerPC iMac (10.4), and two Intel MacBooks (10.6).
    The modem/router are located in an in-wall distribution box in a utility room. I want to keep the hardwired ethernet available in case the WiFi quits temporarily. The TimeCapsule is in a good location (top shelf bookcase on first floor) for coverage of my 2-story house. In principle could eliminate the Lynksys modem, and use the TC as the primary router, but it would be difficult to physical locate the TC where it could both distribute to the house ethernet and have good radio reception.
    Testing via the hardwire ethernet (using Speakeasy and speedtest.net) shows download and upload speed 1.27Mbps and 0.32Mb/s. My ISP is pacbell.net. I get the same result via my W-Fi. Speedtest.net tells me my result is about 40% of the average for pacbell.net to my zip code 94301.
    I've heard there are much faster routers than the BEFSR41, but I don't know if my internet speed is limited by my current router or by pacbell's DSL service.
    Any insights would be appreciated.

    Will a new router increase my broadband speed
    No...your speed is only going to be as fast as your weekest link, which in your case is the DSL modem and the connection speed package you subsribe to.

  • How do you test your new laptops?

    To the gurus or people who have researched this question:  How do you test your new laptops?
    When you get a new laptop, what do you do to test it?
    My X1Carbon might arrive in a couple weeks, and reading about all the failures and DOAs is scary. So assuming mine is not simply DOA, how do you shake out the less obvious or more obscure problems?
    I did search for this info before posting. One other person asked the question, 
    >> Would appreciate advice re optimal set-up and what testing/diagnostics to do to determine if ther...
    but no one answered.

    With testing I start with the basics and work my way to the harder stuff.
    Inspect the external condition of the machine.
    Boot and enter the BIOS before Windows. Review settings then power off.
    Boot from Acronis True Image Home backup/recovery DVD and clone HDD or SSD and thus the factory image before it's ever booted to Windows.
    Boot to Windows and look carefully at the Lenovo factory image and try to get an understanding for the Lenovo software and why it is there.  This does not include the other software from Microsoft, Google, etc.
    Create Lenovo Factory Image DVD set with Rescue and Recovery.  Throw disk set in the box or put on the shelf in case the machine is ever re-sold.
    Test all of the ports - I test every port on the machine for my expected usage.  For instance, in the case of the X1 Carbon I would confirm the mini DisplayPort connection works correctly with an external LCD panel.  If the machine had a IEEE firewire port or something, test that.  Test the USB 3.0 ports with a known working external external enclosure and verify transfer speeds.
    Test the SSD speed with CrystalDiskMark, ATTO and AS Disk Benchmark software to get a good overview of the performance.
    Install HWiNFO and look carefully at the components.  Observe turbo boosting, thermals and fan RPM over the course of a few days for battery and AC power.
    Do at least one full battery discharge and recharge.  Observe the cycle and details are being properly displayed and recorded in Lenovo Power Manager.
    Download all software and drivers from support.lenovo.com for the model being tested.  Confirm visually you have all the core components needed.  Core includes the drivers, power management driver, Power Manager, hotkeys, etc.
    Flatten the machine and install Windows or Linux from scratch.  Install drivers and software.
    Re-test ports and confirm the machine is working properly.
    Benchmark the SSD again.  Confirm no change.
    Install HWiNFO and confirm turbo, thermals and fan speeds are still proper.
    Install core applications and test them.  There may be core features in Windows that also need to be installed and tested.  For instance, Windows 8 Hyper-V for virtualization. 
    Connect any external devices you expect to use and test them.  For instance, video cameras, smartphones, mp3 players, digital cameras, printers, USB docks, etc.
    Do several battery tests with your typical applications and behavior.  The goal here is to simulate how the machine will be used in your day-to-day setting or travel scenarios.  I usually do at least three tests.  This can be rather time consuming with long battery life machines so I get a lot of other testing out of the way first.
    By the time you get to this point, if you haven't hit any major roadblocks you'll start to have a good feel for the machine, and if it is going to be a keeper or not.  The assumption here is that during this timeframe you have been observing the screen, keyboard, and trackpad performance to see if it's to your liking.  The other assumption is that you are using the machine and applications in the scenarios you are purchasing it for.
    I don't run synthetic benchmarks.  I prefer to test a machine against the scenarios I expect to use it with.  I spend most of the first week making this assessment.  If any major hardware defects are present, the machine is automatically returned.  I do not repair machines just received.  No exceptions.
    Week 2 is for ironing out any minor issues and assessing if the machine meets the requirements for the scenarios it will support.  If it does, it is kept.  If it does not, it is returned.  This week includes subjective and objective input.  You have to weigh the pros and cons for a machine against your priorities. It is rare that a machine is perfect so you have to decide the ROI for the machine.  Service and Support must be considered so week two might include a call to support for any unresolved issues.  Don't discount the service you receive during this period.
    After week two, you are likely right on top of the last day to return a Lenovo machine.  The return period is 21 days from the invoice date (I believe), not the day the machine is received so make sure you are well aware of it.  After 21 days, the machine is yours for good unless you sell it.  Decision time.
    Good luck.

  • Difference between BT Broadband Speed Test and all...

    I have recently moved to BT Broadband from TalkTalk as I was dissatisfied with the speeds that I was getting with my TalkTalk line – they were OK outside of peak time but woeful in peak time.  With TalkTalk, I was on their ‘up to’  8Mbps which, in practice, translated to about 6Mbps for download outside peak times but dropped to below 1 Mbps in peak (around 500Kbps and sometimes even lower!) – these measurements were taken regularly with both the TalkTalk and Think Broadband speed tests which were usually roughly in agreement and I haven’t had to rely on memory as I downloaded the spreadsheet records available to Think Broadband registered users. 
    I am now posting this in the hope that somebody can explain the difference between the BT Broadband Speed Checker (Here) and all the others available on the web.
    When you are first connected to BT Broadband they warn you that your speeds will vary over the first ten days while they test your line to ascertain optimum speeds for it.  During that time, I checked it every day early, mid-day and evening (usually around 0630, 1230 & 2000 hrs) with Think Broadband and, yes, it did vary – the first day it started at around 1Mbps for download but rose to 10Mbps by the end of the day. On the second day, it rose to a peak of 17.8Mbps which was unbelievably fast to use (well, to me anyway) but never reached that speed again as over the rest of the ‘test period’, the download speed dropped and dropped to the point where I am now outside of the BT test period and consistently seeing only 2 to 2.5Mbps over a 24 hour period.
    I emphasise that those speeds were all recorded using Think Broadband but I am now doing tests using the BT checker mentioned above and the speeds which BT indicate for downloads are consistently in the 14 to 18 Mbps range.  If I do the BT and TB test in quick succession, they generally show the BT calculated speed to be better than that of TB by a factor of around 7 (ie.  TB at 2 Mbps whilst BT show 14Mbps).  Now either they are measuring different things (or the sams things differently) or one of them is lying – all I know is that my general browsing experience is slower outside of peak times and I can tell by the time it takes to load pages. 
    I might have misunderstood something in these tests but I am now beginning to regret that I fell I for the BT sales pitch which promised me ‘up to’ 20 Mbps but ‘more likely’ 17 Mbps.   I have tried to discuss thisl with BT Broadband technical support but they were no use whatsoever – indeed, I got the impression that he was reading from a script and as it didn’t cover my issue, I was wasting my time – it would also have helped for English to be his first language! 
    According to the BT test, I am well within their ‘minimum guaranteed access speed’ (Here).  for my area (about 4Mbps) and therefore cannot do anything about it.  BUT that is only when measured using the BT speed tester – with any other, I am well below.  I am beginning to feel very conned and might even start looking to withdraw from BT if I cannot get this settled.
    Can anybody help.  I will happily post detailed records of my various tests or router stats if they will help.
    Thanks in advance.  

    OK, I have now done all the tests etc. And here are the results:
    ADSL Line Status from HomeHub 3
    Connection Information
    Line state:
    Connected
    Connection time:
    0 days, 00:27:11
    Downstream:
    23.71 Mbps
    Upstream:
    1.176 Mbps
    ADSL Settings
    VPI/VCI:
    0/38
    Type:
    PPPoA
    Modulation:
    G.992.5 Annex A
    Latency type:
    Fast
    Noise margin (Down/Up):
    3.4 dB / 6.4 dB
    Line attenuation (Down/Up):
    5.3 dB / 2.1 dB
    Output power (Down/Up):
    19.4 dBm / 11.6 dBm
    FEC Events (Down/Up):
    0 / 0
    CRC Events (Down/Up):
    41 / 24
    Loss of Framing (Local/Remote):
    0 / 0
    Loss of Signal (Local/Remote):
    0 / 0
    Loss of Power (Local/Remote):
    0 / 0
    HEC Events (Down/Up):
    20 / 7
    Error Seconds (Local/Remote):
    61 / 13
    BT Speed Test Result
    Download Speed:  6.59Mbps
    Acceptable Range:  4Mbps - 21 Mbps
    IP Profile:  21.42Mbps
    Upload Speed:  0.99Mbps
    Upstream IP Profile:  0.83 Mbps
    Think Broadand Speed Test
    Download Speed:  1.8 Mbps
    Upload Speed:  0.9 Mbps
    Uswitch Speed Test
    Dowload Speed:  1.7 Mbps
    Upload Speed:  0.9 Mbps
    For what it's worth, I followed the guidelines for the BT test and took all of the tests within a 10 minute period.
    All I know is that my daytime BT connection is nowhere near as fast as I had from TalkTalk.  Indeed, it was not even quick enough to watch non-HD YouTube videos earlier this morning without freezing to buffer.

  • Broadband speed - new house

    I hoping someone can help.
    We moved into a new build house last September. As will all new houses, it has a XNTE box rather than a NTE5 master socket. The XNTE is connect to 3 telephone points. 
    We had a issue with the broadband, and a BT engineer came out to look into this. He mentioned the wrong face place was used on a socket (the face place has telephone points, TV points etc). He said two cable were fitted into one socket (to act as an extension), rather than just one cable.
    To cut a long story short, he disconnected the other sockets, and the broadband speed improved from 6mb to 10mb. The electrician came around today, and connected the other sockets back. This cut the speed back down to 6mb. 
    My question is, should having two other sockets connected to the telephone system cause the speed to drop by half? No phones are connected to the other sockets.
    I look forward to all the help!!
    Solved!
    Go to Solution.

    they will do if incorrectly wired as the Openreach engineer removed them why were they reconnected again by the electrician
    If you want to say thanks for a helpful answer,please click on the Ratings star on the left-hand side If the reply answers your question then please mark as ’Mark as Accepted Solution’

  • There is an icon in the upper right hand corner about test your internet connection speed. is this malware

    ''locking - dupe of https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/questions/976623''
    there is an icon in the upper right hand corner about test your internet connection speed. is this malware

    Can you attach a screenshot?
    *http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Screenshot
    *https://support.mozilla.org/kb/how-do-i-create-screenshot-my-problem
    Use a compressed image type like PNG or JPG to save the screenshot.
    Start Firefox in <u>[[Safe Mode|Safe Mode]]</u> to check if one of the extensions (Firefox/Firefox/Tools > Add-ons > Extensions) or if hardware acceleration is causing the problem (switch to the DEFAULT theme: Firefox/Firefox/Tools > Add-ons > Appearance).
    *Do NOT click the Reset button on the Safe Mode start window.
    *https://support.mozilla.org/kb/Safe+Mode
    *https://support.mozilla.org/kb/Troubleshooting+extensions+and+themes

  • Broadband speed testing - any suggestions?

    I want to make some broadband speed comparisons - does anyone have any favoured tests that work with Mac?
    Thanks!

    Hi - Switchebalde, 2 that work with my machine http://myspeed.visualware.com/ and http://www.speakeasy.net/speedtest/ ... Good Luck, Rick
    iMac G5 iSight 20" - 30G iPOD in Slimming Black - HP Pav and Toshiba Sat   Mac OS X (10.4.6)  

  • Recomended Broadband Speeds for new Apple TV

    I was about to purchase an Apple Tv earlier today, but wanted to check the recommended broadband speeds for the service.
    We suffer from speeds of 2.5mbps; probably not a problem with Apple TV - being able to download to the HDD for viewing later. However, streaming only is a little concerning - especially as we'd be looking at HD stuff.
    Have Apple said what speeds are required? Is contents buffered to some sort of memory until it is ready to be viewed.

    The avatar HD film was 5.8gb in size from the itunes store. My internet speed is usually around 9.8mbps but can drop down to 7mbps in busy times. I rent HD films a lot and it usually takes about 20 seconds to 1 minute from pressing rent to being able to play the HD movies. Only once have I had an issue with the film freezing up half way through, it turned out the internet went down on my ISP side of things.
    As apposed to having 2.5mbps I am not to sure on times but it would just be a case of waiting longer at the beginning before pressing play, for the film to build up in the buffer so you don't catch up to where the film has got to in downloading. That is if my understanding of the apple tv downloads and plays at same time is right! If I am wrong I would be very interested in knowing exactly how it works.
    But to answer the question at the beginning I have not seen an official minimum download speed for the apple tv but looks like from other peoples experiences you can't go wrong with something bigger than 6/7mbps.

  • From the old forum.... Slow broadband speeds in th...

    FROM THE OLD FORUM Original post by John Jorgensen...
    Slow broadband speeds in the evening all of a sudden
    Posted: Jan 22, 2010 9:17 AM           
    Click to report abuse...           Click to reply to this thread     Reply
    Hi,
    I have had bt broadband opt3 for almost 3 months now and have always had a healthy 9mb+ connection, however have noticed it being very slow in the evening when I come home from work, I checked the speed last nite as iplayer was constantly freezing and was getting 1mb . A bit upset by this as I got bt broadband to play my ps3 online and to get faster speeds on my laptop, and I use these services mostly at nite.
    I checked my speed this morning and was getting 11mb, is this normal or am I being capped I cant believe Id be going over my download limit. Can someone from bt get back to me on this?
    Thanks
    John
    alison griffiths     
    Posts: 54
    Registered: 11/3/09
        Re: Slow broadband speeds in the evening all of a sudden
    Posted: Jan 22, 2010 11:22 AM   in response to: John Jorgensen in response to: John Jorgensen           
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    Welcome to the world of BT , the tv advert when he says " business slow" when trying to load a webpage is not other companies thats BT.
    John Jorgensen     
    Posts: 2
    Registered: 9/2/09
        Re: Slow broadband speeds in the evening all of a sudden
    Posted: Jan 22, 2010 12:11 PM   in response to: alison griffiths in response to: alison griffiths           
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    Yes Alison, I think I can see that now. I wouldnt mind if broadband was a bit slower at peak times, I know thats normal, but when I'm only getting 1mb when my max is 14mb, I just dont feel I'm getting what I pay for. And when it gets to the point where I cant watch iplayer without it stuttering everywhere and online games lagging on the ps3, this is certainly not what I'm paying for.
    I was hoping one of the mods here would help me and check my line and see if there is any cap on the line and get it removed.
    I really dont wanna phone India, I deal with them 5 days a week as is...
    Think I will just send one of the mods an email to check my line and see if it is being capped or if somethings wrong.
    anthony dickerson     
    Posts: 72
    Registered: 4/26/07
        Re: Slow broadband speeds in the evening all of a sudden
    Posted: Jan 22, 2010 3:52 PM   in response to: John Jorgensen in response to: John Jorgensen           
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    You will never get decent speeds on Iplayer,
    BT limit it because they want you to subscribe to their precious BT Vision service.
    The only way you are guaranteed to get decent speeds on BT is to subscibe to BT Vision and also unlimited broadband.
    Then you will get priority when you stream TV at your exchange unlike fighting it out with all the other broadband users as you currently are for the available bandwith.the more over subscribed your local exchange the worse it is
    Paddy B Mod     
    Posts: 199
    Registered: 10/13/08
        Slow broadband speeds in the evening all of a sudden
    Posted: Jan 23, 2010 2:04 PM   in response to: anthony dickerson in response to: anthony dickerson           
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    Hi John,
    I can take a look at the network side of things for you, to see if there is anything I can do to help improve your speed during peak periods. Please could you drop me an email with your BT account details? Please also include a link to this thread. It would also be very helpful if you could run a few speed tests using www.speedtester.bt.com when you feel your Broadband is running slow. I can then check those results from here.
    Thanks
    Paddy
    BT Forum Moderator - [email protected] - if you're emailing please include a link to your thread so I can reference back to it.
    Mateusz Sokolin...     
    Posts: 2
    Registered: 10/11/08
        Re: Slow broadband speeds in the evening all of a sudden
    Posted: Jan 24, 2010 7:33 PM   in response to: John Jorgensen in response to: John Jorgensen           
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    Well John i'll tell you what it is...
    First of all welcome to BT and I hope you'll enjoy 18months of pain and suffer.
    OK here it goes....
    If you look at your contract, find a rule that says Fair Usage Policy.
    Basically it states that BT will cap anyone that is abusing their lines.
    However, it does not say what are the limits after which you are going to be capped for how long and at what times. (I'll come back to this later and explain)
    If you ring 08007076044 I'm sure that someone will confirm my theory. As constant 1MBit between 6PM till 11/12 PM is actually FUP applied on to your account.
    Ok time to explain my frustration about FUP.
    Since I signed my contract with "lovely" BT for constant 4 months I had similar issue but it took me even longer to find out what is going on and how to deal with this problem (thanks to google).
    FUP team states that if you exceed 100GB in a month (everyone will admit that these days 100GB is nothing when a single game for PS3/XBox360/PC sometimes is more than 5GB and 1080p film is about 12GB) will cap you for a month at peak times to outstanding and superfast 1Mbit (about 130-150KB/s).
    I'be been watching my download and for few months never exceeded that 100GB in a month. Been ringing FUP team to verify when suddenly they told me that from (cant remember exactly) March FUP will apply only to accounts that are using Torrents and other P2P.
    you won't believe how happy I was hearing that.... So i've started to download and next month guess what.... 1Mbit connection.
    Really mad rang FUP team and asked them what on earth is going on. They confirmed that its only P2P and I've explained them that I only use Youtube, BBC iPlayer, Rapidshare, Steam and XBox Live, Beatport (just don't understand how ppl can use torrents and other P2P as they are just way to slow). So they were happy to take the cap off my broadband connection.
    Next month same issue solved exactly the same way.
    After that for consecutive few months I had no problem whatsoever until September where FUP Team said that there is no such thing and FUP applies to everyone.
    So just want to say that BT is rubbish that can't keep their word.
    I went to one of the sales advisor in the shopping centre and asked him how FUP works as it does not say in the contract "how, when, who and what".
    So he said that policy is applied based on amount of files downloaded within that 100GB. So if I download e.g. 3x 50GB (although its 150GB altogether) files I wont be affected but 100x 1GB will put a cap on me.
    I've been so curious if what he said was right and started to download 2x 60GB and guess what... Got frigging FUP placed on my account!!!.
    I've got 2months left with them and will be extremely happy to cancel my contract, moreover, I will do everything in my power to sue them under EU Consumer Rights Law (that states that contract should be clear and fair to both sides) as Fair Usage Policy is one of those things that allows BT to do anything they want to their customers;
    1. No clear explanation of what FUP is.
    2. Does not states the amount of downloaded data required to have cap on the acount
    3. Does not states for how long it will be applied
    4. Does not states when it will be applied
    If you look at e.g. Virgin Broadband everything is clearly written in nice and understandable way. It warns you at what times FUP will be applied under what circumstances and for how long. Isn't it what we all want to know??
    Alex Owen     
    Posts: 3
    Registered: 12/13/09
        Re: Slow broadband speeds in the evening all of a sudden
    Posted: Jan 24, 2010 9:35 PM   in response to: Mateusz Sokolin... in response to: Mateusz Sokolin...           
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    @Mateusz I think I maybe a victim of this outragous stint BT have done. I have 2 XBOX 360's running on XBOX Live, 2 Desktop PCs connected to the web constantly, and 3 laptops, we have a torrent sharing running and World Of Warcraft on one of the PCs. All of this is shared across a 6 person family. How can a family where two members goto to college and university do their college ork, download application such as VB.net do their coursework and revise without the hassle of a **** connection. Seriously BT get your ******* head outta your **** and stop this ********, we are customers, we pay for what we are offered. When I signed up several years ago I could download everything on the net woithout infracions on my line being set in motion. You altered my contract without telling me. You will lose custom from this. Also you have ****** my wireless
    Edited by: Alex Owen on Jan 24, 2010 9:36 PM
    amanda jones     
    Posts: 33
    Registered: 1/8/10
        Re: Slow broadband speeds in the evening all of a sudden
    Posted: Jan 25, 2010 8:42 PM   in response to: Alex Owen in response to: Alex Owen           
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    You lot are lucky, We wish we could be capped to 1mbit. Our IP profile is capped to 500kbit because BT say the line isn't good enough for anything more. We are paying for option3 up to 8mbit and BT have said we must continue to pay for it for the remainder of the contract, or buy ourselves out of it early, the reason they give.... Up to 8mbit means up to 8mbit. If you dont get 8mbit then TOUGH LUCK SUCKERS!!
    The outcome? We feel like we've been turned over by a dodgey second hand car salesman called BT. The internet deal he flogged us was a dog, a ringer, it wasn't cosher and certainly had a false MOT certificate.
    Computer Geek     
    Posts: 429
    Registered: 7/22/05
        Re: Slow broadband speeds in the evening all of a sudden
    Posted: Jan 25, 2010 8:49 PM   in response to: amanda jones in response to: amanda jones           
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    Hi Amanda,
    Why have you joined BT Option 3 when you can not get what BT can offer?
    No pun intended but you are a bit of a sucker for paying high prices where other suppliers are cheaper and can provide what your line can support.
    CG
    amanda jones     
    Posts: 33
    Registered: 1/8/10
        Re: Slow broadband speeds in the evening all of a sudden
    Posted: Jan 26, 2010 9:13 PM   in response to: Computer Geek in response to: Computer Geek           
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    we moved house last october to this one, the connection was rubbish from the get-go, BT said the router was broken and we needed a new one, we said OK. That "OK" meant that we had entered into a new contract for option 3 same as out old one. The router wasn't broken, the new one didnt fix or improve the problem, we have since asked for a price reduction or compensation and been told "no". we are in contract and can pay to buy ourselves out of it if we like but otherwise we have to pay for option 3 and recieve fixed rate 500kb.
    Clare Thurston     
    Posts: 4
    Registered: 10/17/06
        Re: Slow broadband speeds in the evening all of a sudden
    Posted: Jan 27, 2010 11:57 AM   in response to: amanda jones in response to: amanda jones           
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    Hi Amanda,
    I think you'll find that the Hold To Term rules have changed. BT are now unable to charge you for the account if you no longer require it. It is against OFCOM's rulings for a company to make more money out of you as a leaving customer than an existing one. However, You will need to pay for the connection charge (if that has not expired it's original differed contract) which is £40. A cancellation fee of £25 if you are simply cancelling and not migrating using a MAC key and for any hardware. The Routers are advertised at £88 and i would suggest that if they believed on to be faulty then that would be replaced under guarantee and not be put on a differed basis. I would check exactly what they say the are charging you and query this through OFCOM. http://www.ofcom.org.uk/

    Months of impecable service form BT as an option 3 customer. (I've even recommended BT to people)
    but
    For the past 2 weeks peak traffic has murdered my connection.
    I can get 14mbit off peak, and it used to drop to about 7-9 at peak times.
    Now its down to 1-2mbit at peak times. (no i haven't breached FUP as I check my btinternet inbox for the 80GB warning)
    I think its resonable to experience drop off but 90%!!!
    BT advertising says fast speeds at peak times. less than 2mbit is not fast. (that the governments minimum standard!!!)
    I don't know how to procede because when I'm experiencing these issues if I ring up I will end up waiting so long to speak to someone (because its peak time) the concection wiill be better again.
    I can think of no recourse other than to approach trading standards...
    Guarnetee me 5mbit at peak times (enough to stream HD iplayer) and I'd be happy
    That is what BT vision customers are in essence are getting + what ever their PC is using.
    Fair usage? what about Fair Supply.

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