Recommended Posts

So, some backstory/relevant points:

- This is a Linksys WRT-54G (v2 iirc), loaded with Tomato firmware (had 1.23, upgraded to 1.28 yesterday hoping that'd help; it didn't).

- Did a 'factory' reset of the router to make sure there weren't any bad settings messing with anything.

- This just started happening recently.. I can think of nothing I did that might cause this to happen.

- As far as I can tell, wireless signal isn't the issue. Windows shows 48-54mbps with 4-5 bars all the time (no variance when the lag is noticeable).

- I've tried flipping around the channels, to lesser-crowded ends of the spectrum - same problem.

- I've accessed the router while this lag is apparent - the router pages load slow too so it's not an ISP problem.

What it looks like on a ping monitor when this happens:

ping.png

So, I need suggestions.. what can I do to further diagnose this problem? I'm thinking my router is finally on its way out but I'd like to be sure before I just go buy a new router. Thanks!

Assume all until I say otherwise in the next few minutes

EDIT: Yes, I set up a ping monitor on my laptop and it's doing it.

I am going to try something though, the one thing that has changed since this started is the fact that I purchased a TV, which has smart-tv/wifi functionality. Going to disable it and see if it still happens.

Twas a long shot but I disabled the wifi on my tv and it's still acting up.

EDIT - Didn't see the edit above

Unless someone else has an idea, I can only think of trying a different router and see if the problem is solved

EDIT - Unless your neighbours have some crazy electromagnetic world domination machine that comes online every few minutes :p

Well, I powered down both my modem and router for a good minute or so, it has yet to act up again. I'll update this post if/when it does (I'm also keeping an eye on ping rates from the computer hardwired to the router to see if it's just wireless or the router in general).

Edit: I have noticed in watching these ping monitors on 3 different computers that when one computer's ping will be steady, an other one can start jittering a bit, and vice versa.

jitter.png

^ While one of the other computers graphs will start jittery then smooth off when another computer gets jittery. This may be completely irrelevant and just a remote server thing (I am pinging google.com from 3 different computers).

In the couple minutes I've been observing this, I haven't seen any of the problematic spikes.

Well, I powered down both my modem and router for a good minute or so, it has yet to act up again. I'll update this post if/when it does (I'm also keeping an eye on ping rates from the computer hardwired to the router to see if it's just wireless or the router in general).

With 1.23 firmware you were running, was there a time that this version firmware was fine ?

Maybe try DD-WRT firmware with a full 30/30/30 reset just to make sure it is not a bug in the firmware

With 1.23 firmware you were running, was there a time that this version firmware was fine ?

Maybe try DD-WRT firmware with a full 30/30/30 reset just to make sure it is not a bug in the firmware

Yeah, it was fine for a long time. My ping has yet to go haywire again since I powered off the modem/router for like a minute earlier

Yeah, it was fine for a long time. My ping has yet to go haywire again since I powered off the modem/router for like a minute earlier

How long have you had the problem for ?

I'd have thought if it was just needing a power cycle, that the firmware upgrade would have sorted that.

Unless it was the modem doing something weird and messing with the router, I've had to power cycle the modem this end too when a router power cycle did nothing, but that was just slow net speeds not wireless problems

Fingers crossed :)

Seems like it's really only been a few days.. though I'm not 100% sure

If it starts acting up again, personally, first I'd probably try dd-wrt / open-wrt to rule out the firmware, if it continued I'd try a new router to rule that out, if it continued after that, walk around with an EMF meter to find out where the interference is coming from

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Valve finally confirms Steam Machine prices, starts at $1049 for 512GB option by Pulasthi Ariyasinghe The $1,428 option The Steam Hardware lineup that Valve announced last year is slowly starting to roll out. Following the recent Steam Controller launch, Valve has now confirmed the price of the Steam Machine, its all-in-one console-like solution for PC gaming in the living room. There are currently four variants being presented, with only the storage and the included controller being the biggest differences. All of the Steam Machines have the same internals consisting of a semi-custom AMD Zen 4 CPU with six cores and 12 threads, an RDNA 3 28CU GPU, 16GB of DDR5 memory, and 8GB of GDDR6 VRAM, all inside the familiar box Valve has been showing off for months now. The Steam Machine base model starts at $1,049. This has a 512GB NVMe SSD but does not come with a Steam Controller. Keep in mind that storage can be expanded with the microSD card slot too. Next, the $1,128 model has the exact same storage as the previous one but it does come with the new Steam Controller. If you need the Steam Machine to have more storage for games and apps than that, then the 2TB tiers are also available. The $1,349 Steam Machine has no controller once again, but it does ship with two extra faceplates (red fabric and solid walnut) to replace the standard black one. The final option costs $1,428, and it adds the controller back into the bundle. The Steam Machine ships with the Linux-based SteamOS. The box has a 1 Gigabit Ethernet port, DisplayPort 1.4, and HDMI 2.0, as well as one USB-C and four USB-A ports. Keep in mind that when purchasing standalone, the Steam Controller has a $100 price tag. With the above bundles, that drops to $80. It's a rather expensive machine for the internals it is touting, though the design and small form factor do help it somewhat. However, at the same time, the lack of upgradability hurts it. Valve says the ongoing parts shortages and massive price hikes for memory were the leading causes for this price. "The overall effect is that our original goal for the price of Steam Machine is no longer viable," added the company. "So the prices we're sharing today reflect the state of the world for manufacturing; or, more accurately, it reflects the price of the components as we've secured them over the past 6 months." Valve wants interested gamers to reserve it now to get the chance to pre-order a Steam Machine starting June 25, with shipping starting on June 29. Head here to sign up. The invites to buy it will be sent in a randomized order.
    • What the press release doesn’t mention, however, is how much water the natural gas plant itself will consume, Natural gas plants use about 2,803 gallons of water per megawatt-hour produced, which is significantly less than coal-fired plants that use around 19,185 gallons per megawatt-hour. Overall, natural gas plants are more water-efficient, using 584% less water than traditional power plants on average. AI generated
  • Recent Achievements

    • Dedicated
      tuben earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • Week One Done
      mnsgroup earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Conversation Starter
      sumytbe earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
    • One Year In
      B4dM1k3 earned a badge
      One Year In
    • One Year In
      DarkWun earned a badge
      One Year In
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      516
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      203
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      97
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      82
    5. 5
      neufuse
      67
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!