CPE 510, dramatic low speed.

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CPE 510, dramatic low speed.

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CPE 510, dramatic low speed.
CPE 510, dramatic low speed.
2017-06-14 10:08:42
Model :

Hardware Version :

Firmware Version :

ISP :

Hi. So confused with a quality you guys from tp-link are offering, hope that thats my fault and there is an option to resolve the issue. Point to point connection, both CPE 510, both 40mhz, (tried 10/20/40), with and without maxtream, both points are only 35 meters away, speed never grows higher than 75 mb/s.Adviced 300, ok, 250...200, but 75..? Why any usual router 5ghz, lets say buffalo, airport time capsule, easely gives up to 200 mb/s, why professional equipment cant work as adviced?Please kindly help, how can we fix the situation, because we bought many of those.
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#1
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Re:CPE 510, dramatic low speed.
2017-06-14 18:10:49
Wireless -> Transmit power 1dB...Apply, save, test.

Report back
Now serving finite customer via f(x)=AirTime/∞ on the 5Ghz band :-/
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#2
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Re:CPE 510, dramatic low speed.
2017-06-15 09:09:22

RTouris wrote

Wireless -> Transmit power 1dB...Apply, save, test.Report back
Thanks for your kind reply, transmit power was set to 0, and to 1, on unique and on both, more than 6 speed drops to 20mb/s0dbm on both (or 1 dbm), gives 75 mb/s on peak. Any suggestions?
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#3
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Re:CPE 510, dramatic low speed.
2017-06-15 10:32:09

ruzzzz wrote

Adviced 300, ok, 250...200, but 75..?


You certainly will not achieve 300 Mbit/s data speed since the CPE's Ethernet interface is capable of 100 Mbit/s only (that's the price for having passive PoE at low costs). What's more, 300 Mbit/s is maximum WiFi speed in a best-case scenario, which makes sense - regardless of the limited Ethernet speed - for achieving a good AirTime if more devices are sharing the same channel. If you get 75 Mbit/s data speed, the WiFi speed is almost certainly around 135/150 Mbit/s (MCS 7) already or even better if there are many interferences. To improve this a a little further, make sure the devices are precisely aligned and reduce TX power on such a short distance, but it never ever will exceed 100 Mbit/s for data.
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Re:CPE 510, dramatic low speed.
2017-06-15 12:20:37

R1D2 wrote

You certainly will not achieve 300 Mbit/s data speed since the CPE's Ethernet interface is capable of 100 Mbit/s only (that's the price for having passive PoE at low costs). What's more, 300 Mbit/s is maximum WiFi speed in a best-case scenario, which makes sense - regardless of the limited Ethernet speed - for achieving a good AirTime if more devices are sharing the same channel. If you get 75 Mbit/s data speed, the WiFi speed is almost certainly around 135/150 Mbit/s (MCS 7) already or even better if there are many interferences. To improve this a a little further, make sure the devices are precisely aligned and reduce TX power on such a short distance, but it never ever will exceed 100 Mbit/s for data.
Thanks for your post.Sounds like this product was badly advertised my marketing team. Everywhere big label 300mb/s, real 75.That is at least incorrect, no user cares about "radio speed", that's fake.Why can't speed test utility (built in) show 300? No ethernet port is used, right? It never showed me more than I mentoned already.Anyway, IMHO tp link made a mistake by advertising fake speed. Nowadays any home router which supports 5ghz gives you 200+ mb/s.Thanks everyone and cheers.
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Re:CPE 510, dramatic low speed.
2017-06-15 19:00:52

ruzzzz wrote

Everywhere big label 300mb/s, real 75.That is at least incorrect, no user cares about "radio speed", that's fake.


Any wireless device always negotiates WiFi speed with the clients constantly, it will therefore change dynamically all the time. For example, SSIDs are send out every 10 seconds using the lowest speed every device supports, which is as low as 6 Mbit/s for 802.11n. To get the 75 Mbit/s data on the wire over the air while other clients are interfering, the WiFi speed must be a multiple of the data speed to be expected. So, 300 Mbit/s WiFi speed gives perfect conditions to even reach 75 Mbit/s data speed!

All manufacturers I know (and I know a lot) always specify the maximum WiFi speed of their products, which is implemented by the modulation scheme. There are several different modulation schemes possible depending on what you enable and what the device selects according to environmental influences! That's absolutely no fake and yes, for professional use of CPEs, WiFi speed is an important characteristic of a device - in combination of modulation schemes, channel bandwidth and some other factors - to be able to calculate expected real data throughput possible with the device.

You are right that end-users don't have to care about such details and are used to rate the speed for the actual data throughput, but WiFi professionals indeed do need to know every aspects of a device such as its maximum WiFi speed and many other characteristics.


Why can't speed test utility (built in) show 300? No ethernet port is used, right?


Yes and no. The speed test also uses the Ethernet interface of the CPE's Linux system, meaning the speed test (it's a normal iperf BTW) sends its data through the TCP/IP and radio layers as any other external device would do over the external Ethernet port, although the internal speed is not limited to 100 Mbit/s, that's right. But timing in the network layers will still degrade throughput somewhat. BTW: my speed test shows something around 200 to 230 Mbit/s data rate at 300 Mbit/s WiFi rate. Thats pretty good for a N300 device.

If you need to see the pure wireless speed, which the WiFi chip achieves and which constantly changes (e.g. for sending the SSID or for different clients or at different weather conditions), use the data displayed on the Status page under Radio Status -> TX/RX rate or the graph on the same page. There you will see much higher speeds very often, in the form of "bursts" at those moments the CPE gains AirTime. That's why it is important to get as much data over the air during the available AirTime slot the device can acquire. No WiFi device is constantly acquiring a radio channel, it often has to silence its sender in order to give other devices the change to answer.
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