I've been having these problems since installing wisp last month. I'm not sure what the problem is, but I'll start with 80 ping, and jump up to 150, 200, down to 120, down to 90, up to 200. Running tracert shows big 150+ spikes on random hops, and I'll run it again the same server is back down to 20-40, and a different hop will have a spike. I'll tried calling my isp and informing them about these lag spikes but they assured me everything looks good on their end.
I have tried with and without a router. I am on a desktop so I'm hard wired. It doesn't matter the time of day, however late at night (1 or 2am it's better for obvious reasons) but still an unusually high ping. Here are 3 tracerts. Two are to a server in Atlanta (for the game smite) the other is to the Overwatch servers in Washington (northwest coast). What I find strange is that the last hop to the smite server shows 50-60ms but in game I get over 100 and never gets anywhere close to 60. It looks almost like packet loss? Or possibly some interference. It doesn't matter the game, I always have a high ping with it constantly jumping all over the place.
Any help would be greatly appreciated. Also, whenever I call my ISP to help me fix this problem, they change a few settings such as the channel I'm on, etc. but it always makes it worse.
Edit: a buddy of mine that works in networking had some comments.
The first public address (between 192 address and 10 address)
That's your ISP's
So that's their gateway
but it makes no sense as to why it'd go from there, then bounce back into their private network.
At that point it jumps over to OneCleveland.
What's quite interesting is that the f***ing qwest loop you're hitting has more steady ping than this shit.
So anyways
Your connection is bouncing from your local carrier, to Cleveland, then to New York.
you>your ISP>OneCleveland (their backbone)>TATA Communications(THEIR backbone)
You have a serious stream issue.
So you have what seems like issues within your ISP's network.
I'm going to guess saturation
overselling, etc.
Then it goes out into their backbone, and you have issues there...
Again, I'm going to guess either saturation issues or ddos, but a ddos is usually temporary. Your issue is regular.
I have tried with and without a router. I am on a desktop so I'm hard wired. It doesn't matter the time of day, however late at night (1 or 2am it's better for obvious reasons) but still an unusually high ping. Here are 3 tracerts. Two are to a server in Atlanta (for the game smite) the other is to the Overwatch servers in Washington (northwest coast). What I find strange is that the last hop to the smite server shows 50-60ms but in game I get over 100 and never gets anywhere close to 60. It looks almost like packet loss? Or possibly some interference. It doesn't matter the game, I always have a high ping with it constantly jumping all over the place.
Any help would be greatly appreciated. Also, whenever I call my ISP to help me fix this problem, they change a few settings such as the channel I'm on, etc. but it always makes it worse.
Edit: a buddy of mine that works in networking had some comments.
The first public address (between 192 address and 10 address)
That's your ISP's
So that's their gateway
but it makes no sense as to why it'd go from there, then bounce back into their private network.
At that point it jumps over to OneCleveland.
What's quite interesting is that the f***ing qwest loop you're hitting has more steady ping than this shit.
So anyways
Your connection is bouncing from your local carrier, to Cleveland, then to New York.
you>your ISP>OneCleveland (their backbone)>TATA Communications(THEIR backbone)
You have a serious stream issue.
So you have what seems like issues within your ISP's network.
I'm going to guess saturation
overselling, etc.
Then it goes out into their backbone, and you have issues there...
Again, I'm going to guess either saturation issues or ddos, but a ddos is usually temporary. Your issue is regular.
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