![]() But that makes 0 sense since my motherboard is MSI H110M Gaming with speed of up to 1Gbps. She said its my motherboard thats capped to 100Mbps. Speed should be 100mbps, in the ethernet status screen shows as 10.0 and the Ookla Speedtest confirms that thats all Im getting. A rep from my ISP checked my hardware by going into Control Panel\Network and Internet\Network Connections\Ethernet Status and there the dialog window says speed is 100Mbps. Now when I run a d/load speed test by going to a d/load speed test website, I get a download speed of no more than 100Mbps. I'm subscribed to get up to 400Mbps with my ISP. But that makes 0 sense since I'm subscribed to 400Mbps by my ISP. So, if your internet connection is 200Mbps, then the max you can get is 200Mbps. If thats true then youre saying its my ISP's fault. So when I run a d/load speed test which I get 100Mbps on thats because my ISP wont provide any more speed. And the 343Mbps speed is the max speed my modem can download. Youre saying my network speed my ISP provides is indicated by the ethernet connector light. My laptop with a wireless 802.11ac connection get the same or slightly slower speed.I'm confused by your speed definitions. Note that if I run Comcast's speed test I get a 220-240Mbps download speed on my desktop with a wired Ethernet connection. You need the margin because you can't depend on the modem's download speed actually being at what it is rated at. Like I said you need a modem that has a faster download speed than what your plan gives you. I have Comcast's Blast! plan that gives me a download speed of 200Mbps. My modem has a maximum download speed of 640Mbs. The TP-LINK TL-SF1005D 5-port 10/100M Fast Ethernet Switch provides you with a low-cost, easy-to-use, high-performance, seamless and standard upgrade to improve your old network to a 100Mbps network. You may find that your Ethernet speed is capped at 100 Mbps when your Internet Service Provider (ISP), or your internal network connection, should be providing speeds higher than 100 Mbps. Your actual download speed for that modem may be less than that. Note that 343Mbps speed is the maximum download speed for your modem. However if there is a problem and your LAN speed is only 10Mbps then you can never download any faster than 10Mbps until you fix your network problem. If for some reason there is a local network problem and its speed is not at the expected 1Gbps then it will act as a bottleneck and slow your downloads from the ISP also.įor example suppose the LAN speed is at the expected 1Gbps then you can download at the expected 343Mbps speed. as long as your local network speed is at least that amount there is no slowdown. The 343Mbps speed is the maximum speed your modem can download data from your ISP. That is the maximum speed between computers in your local network's wired network and the speed between them and the modem. The lights above the Ethernet connector indicate the local network maximum speed. You are confusing the maximum download speed with the network speed.
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