Archer C7 issues with wireless speed at desktop.
Archer C7 issues with wireless speed at desktop.
Greetings,
I have been getting agonizingly slow wifi connection at my desktop, which is only in next room. DL and UL speeds are erratic, but never fast. One was as bad as 1.8Mbps DL. Pinging from main machine, with ethernet wire connected, is erratic as well. Often times no packets are received by desktop IP address.
Interestingly, my laptop, in the same room, gets a connection that is 20 Mbps, which is at least 2 times what I'm now getting on my desktop in the best case. However, I cannot ping the laptop at all. The hard-wired machine in next room has speeds of 114.6 Mbps/11.3 Mbps.
I had a power outage the other day, and could not disconnect the router from the outlet before power came back on. Do the symptoms above indicate a power surge may have fried something? Or does anyone have any ideas as to what to try now, before I buy a new router? Any suggestions wouldl be greatly appreciated. Thanks.
MrR
- Copy Link
- Subscribe
- Bookmark
- Report Inappropriate Content
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
I installed the new wireless dual-band adapter. It took two tries to get the driver to install properly, but it did. The DL speed is now right up there with the hard-wired machine in the other room at over 100 Mbps DL and 11.4 Mbps on the UL. For some reason it shows up as a "Public Network", where the other 2.4 GHz did not. I can't see how that's a problem, as it's still password protected, etc.
The only other thing that I didn't expect is that my IPV4 address changed. Is that because the wifi adapter that's on the motherboard is still there, i.e., it gets to keep the address it had? Oh, and I tried to ping test the connection, using the new IPV4 address, but it was 0 for 4 on responses. Being that my speed issue has been fixed, and that's the important thing, I won't worry unless someone knowledgeable tells me to. ;-) Cheers.
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
Your new adapter will have a different IP becuase it has its own MAC address. The network being public has to do with your operating system. If you do not share resources from that computer to other devices, then I would simply leave that alone.
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
Information
Helpful: 0
Views: 2633
Replies: 14
Voters 0
No one has voted for it yet.