Wireless Connection not maxed out but “slow”

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I just got a 20MBit cable connection at home and tried to measure the bandwidth from this with my laptop. After a few tries (5), I could see I was getting 14/1 Mbps (down/up) speeds from speedtest.net

That was faster than my old 12Mbit connection (which measured 11.5/1) so I knew my provider did upgrade my connection, but I wasn't able to get all the speed I thought I would have. So instead of using the wireless connection, I tried using a regular ethernet cable and measure it again. It measured 19.5/1 which I believe is pretty close to the speed I was looking for.

The wireless router I'm using is a WNR2000 (version 1) from NetGear and a Intel WiFi Link 5100 from a VAIO Z520 (which has a gigabit ethernet lan port too).

I don't really know what else to do: router firmware is up to date, as is my wireless card driver. Windows says the connection is at 54Mbps, with all the bars for signal strength. The router is about 45 centimeters away from the notebook, so I don't think it is a signal strength problem.

Does anyone know what else I can try to get the best speed from my wifi?

TIA

Best Answer

First of all it's really hard get the 20mbit/s, it'll always be around 16-18mbit/s (also check that in speedtest.net you choose megabits as preference to meassure speed) because of the latency or saturation of the network.

If you live in a place with a lot of wireless routers around it may cause some interference with the channels (here's a guide on how to optimize that). Also you may want to limit your data transfer mode to g-only so your router/computer stop transfer in b band that can slow things down a little bit.

Other things you can do: change DNS to either OpenDNS or Google Public DNS, if your router/computer has the option of afterburner turn it on, limit the data transfer to 54mbps only, and open ports for specific applications like torrent clients or things like that from your router.

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