In game ping increased from 36–38 ms to 52–55 ms after BIOS update + Ryzen 2600 to 5600 upgrade.

In game ping increased from 36–38 ms to 52–55 ms after BIOS update + Ryzen 2600 to 5600 upgrade.

In game ping increased from 36–38 ms to 52–55 ms after BIOS update + Ryzen 2600 to 5600 upgrade.
In game ping increased from 36–38 ms to 52–55 ms after BIOS update + Ryzen 2600 to 5600 upgrade.
8 hours ago
Tags: #Windows 11 #High latency after upgrade
Model: Archer T4E  
Hardware Version: V3
Firmware Version: N/A

System

  • Motherboard: ASRock B450M-HDV R4.0

  • Old CPU: AMD Ryzen 5 2600

  • New CPU: AMD Ryzen 5 5600

  • GPU: AMD RX 6600

  • Wi-Fi Adapter: TP-Link Archer T4E v3

  • Driver Version: 2024.10.143.0
    Also, my spelling is not the b​​​​​​est so I used a bit of AI to fix it. Sorry for that.

What Changed

I updated my motherboard BIOS from 3.70 to 4.10 in preparation for upgrading from a Ryzen 5 2600 to a Ryzen 5 5600.

To install the CPU and cooler I had to:

  • Remove the GPU

  • Install the new CPU

  • Install the cooler

  • Reinstall the GPU

After the upgrade I noticed my League of Legends EUNE ping increased from a stable 36–38 ms to a stable 52–55 ms.

The strange part is that the connection remains stable. It isn't fluctuating wildly. It just seems consistently higher than before.

Current Windows reports:

SSID: ELTX-2.4GHz_WiFi_C3DC

Protocol:

  • Wi-Fi 4 (802.11n)

Band:

  • 2.4 GHz

Channel:

  • 5

Link Speed:

  • 300/300 Mbps

Signal appears stable.

Speed Tests

Download:

  • 111.86 Mbps

Upload:

  • 98.20 Mbps

Idle Latency:

  • 5 ms

Download Latency:

  • 136 ms

Upload Latency:

  • 74 ms

ISP:

  • ST CABLE

  • SAT-TRAKT

  • Becej, Serbia

Router Settings (2.4 GHz)

Basic Settings

Band: 2.4 GHz (B+G+N)

Mode: AP

Channel Width: 40 MHz

Control Sideband: Upper

Channel: 5

Radio Power: 100%

Regdomain: RUSSIAN(12)

Advanced Settings

Fragment Threshold:

  • 2346

RTS Threshold:

  • 2347

Beacon Interval:

  • 100

Data Rate:

  • Auto

Preamble:

  • Long

Client Isolation:

  • Disabled

Protection:

  • Disabled

Aggregation:

  • Enabled

Short GI:

  • Enabled

TX Beamforming:

  • Enabled

MU-MIMO:

  • Disabled

Multicast to Unicast:

  • Enabled

Band Steering:

  • Disabled

WMM:

  • Enabled

802.11k:

  • Enabled

802.11v:

Enabled

Archer T4E Advanced Device Manager Settings

802.11b:

  • Enabled

Beacon Interval:

  • 100

Current Operation Preference:

  • Disabled

MAC Randomization:

  • Disabled

Multi-Channel Concurrent:

  • Disabled

Preamble Mode:

  • Long Only

PreferBandRSSIThreshold:

  • 25

Preferred Band:

  • 2.4 GHz First

Wake On Magic Packet:

  • Disabled

Wake On Pattern Match:

  • Disabled

Wireless Mode:

  • IEEE 802.11 b/g/n

Other Things I Noticed

  • One Wi-Fi disconnect occurred while playing Dark Souls 3.

  • During that event the game stuttered and audio froze briefly.

  • Windows then asked for the Wi-Fi password again on the 2.4 GHz network.

  • 5 GHz continued to work.

I also tested the Archer T4E antennas and both appear functional.

I previously used a Tenda USB Wi-Fi adapter before installing the Archer T4E. Some old Tenda drivers may still exist on the system.

Main Questions

Can a BIOS update or CPU swap realistically affect networking in a way that causes a stable ping increase without obvious packet loss?

Could removing and reinstalling the GPU during the CPU upgrade have affected the PCIe Wi-Fi card somehow?

Does anything in my traceroute indicate a routing change between my ISP and Riot?

Is there any reason to suspect a motherboard issue, PCIe issue, or Archer T4E issue?

Has anyone seen League of Legends EUNE routing change recently causing an increase from ~38 ms to ~52 ms?

Additional Testing Performed

Before suggesting basic Wi-Fi optimizations, please note I already tested the following extensively:

Archer T4E Device Manager Tests

  • Changed Wireless Mode from IEEE 802.11 b/g/n to:

    • IEEE 802.11b only

    • IEEE 802.11b/g

  • No change in League of Legends ping (remained ~52–55 ms).

Router Tests

  • Changed Channel Width from 40 MHz to 20 MHz.

  • Changed Channel Number to 1.

  • Tested multiple other channels as well.

  • These settings sometimes improved stability or reduced spikes, but did not reduce the actual average ping, which remained around 52–55 ms.

Important Observation

  • Regardless of router channel, channel width, or Archer T4E wireless mode settings, the ping remains consistently around 52–55 ms.

  • The issue is not random spikes or packet loss; it is a stable increase compared to the previous stable 36–38 ms before the BIOS update and CPU swap.

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