08-29-2020 03:40 PM - last edited on 08-29-2020 03:49 PM by RogersYasmine
I live in Keswick and did a survey of 921 homes and nobody gets speeds above
600mb
Hi technician come to my house and check out the lines and my modem and check the node at the boulevard.the technician said everything is 100% good.
I’ve talk to in Everybody in my neighbourhood and in the surrounding Keswick area where nobody has ever achieved a one gigabit speed that Rogers Claims
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08-31-2020 10:26 PM
Well i was wrong (ROGERS DOES NOT THROTTLE INTERNET SPEED ) Had a real rogers service technician
come to our neighborhood now speed is 600mb to 850mb. check with all neighbours everything perfect
thank you moderators for help
08-30-2020 08:51 AM
Hello, @warhawkice
Welcome to the Rogers Community Forums!
I know how important it is to get fast speeds on your devices especially when you are paying for Gigabit speeds.
The speeds are based on aggregate to the entire home and not to one specific device. In order to determine if you are getting true gigabit speeds to your home, you must simultaneously perform two wired speed tests and add up the total speed of both tests which should be over 1 GB. If you do not have two wired devices you can use one wired device and one device connected via 5G Wi-Fi within 3 meters of the modem.
Please ensure you are using a CAT5e or above ethernet cable. CAT6 is referred for Gigabit plans.
Let us know the results you are getting from the two devices' simultaneous speed test.
RogersTony
08-31-2020 08:46 AM
I live up in keswick as well.. wasnt aware gigabit was available up there now (supposedly?)
Max prior was 500mbps.
With speed boost, I have pulled just over 600 before on my test at home. but I only have the 500 package.
Where exactly are you doing the speed test? (what site, with what endpoints, etc)
And with what hardware, over wired/wireless as Tony asked?
(it can make a difference)
Its possible, even if they are 'selling' the 1gb service.. that the infrastructure up there can not handle it and wont reach 1gbps.. (and is not necessarily throttling)
08-31-2020 10:33 AM
yes I just try what you suggested on pc and lab top together several times and still only get the max 527mb down
but alway get 35mb up load.
08-31-2020 10:42 AM
doing test at speed test .net
your lucky i pay for gigabit speeds . i guess my neighborhood to many people on line
I even had rogers tech hook up his lab top to boulevard box and he got what i got
08-31-2020 10:26 PM
Well i was wrong (ROGERS DOES NOT THROTTLE INTERNET SPEED ) Had a real rogers service technician
come to our neighborhood now speed is 600mb to 850mb. check with all neighbours everything perfect
thank you moderators for help
09-01-2020 08:53 AM
Yeah, sometimes a tweek of a signal, etc.. is all it needs to get stuff up and going proper.
850 is pretty good, even in a best case scenario, unless you were running a 10gbps card and router, you might be hard pressed to get that across a single line (on a regular 1gbps card, etc).
Speedtest can have some varying results too, all based on WHAT endpoint you choose too.
I wonder if you would get any other results on the rogers speed test?
https://www.rogers.com/customer/support/article/internet-speedtest
As it should be straight to rogers and not really going outside the network at all.
Yes, its not a 'real world' scenario as you will often be accessing outside of rogers network... but rogers can really on guarantee the speeds between you and them.. anything outside will start slowing down some.
03-17-2021 08:50 PM
04-29-2021 10:00 PM
04-29-2021 10:13 PM
04-29-2021 10:16 PM
04-30-2021 03:05 PM
Just complaining in this way wont help anyone nor fix anyone's issues.
My wife was watching prime just fine yesterday for like 3 hours non stop.. so is rogers throttling connections to prime specifically?? Not likely.
IF they were to be doing some form of that. (which they DID do in the past against torrents, and they DID get heavily fined by the CRTC at the time and had to stop it), it would likely be localized. They would be doing it to everyone.
Like you said, your neighborhood might be different. But more than likely something else, and not specifically throttling, etc. Could be something as simple as the local nodes, or the whole area, is OVERSOLD, and cant technically manage the load especially with extra people at home right now. That could effect overall speeds, amongst other things.. overall choking peoples connection to any number of things. outside of any sort of other issues where that specific node is having other issues.
All that in the end really doesnt have anything to do with monopolistic practices.
Except for a few rare cases where its say a new subdivision where its a contract for JUST rogers or bell lines to start.. You generally have the choice of either of those. And if you have the choice of those, you do have the choice of choosing any 3rd party ones which run on the rogers/bell lines as well. So there is a lot of choices.
Each person need to research and choose which ones service is best for them
05-19-2021 11:49 PM - last edited on 05-19-2021 11:58 PM by RogersZia
few years ago Rogers did throttle speeds. I think this is happening again.
My download speeds went down drastically on most of the devices - actually on ALL devices ( Mac OS, iOS, Apple TV , Windows10), except for devices runnign on linux. On both wired and wireless connections, the download speed is 2 x times faster with the VPN on, hence bypassing some of Rogers infrastructure servers. As soon as I turn off the VPN and the traffic is rerouted back to regular Rogers servers download speed drops down by 30-50%.
If they do that how could we force Rogers to stop this practice ? ... my contract is / paid for 1Gbps package, but in reality Im getting 500Mbps. THIS IS TOTALLY UNFAIR, and totally frustrating. Any advice is really appreciated.
Is anybody able to provide a reasonable, alternate explanation for much faster internet with the VPN on , besides the service provider throttling the speed ? Thank you.
05-20-2021 08:16 AM
Routing.
Could be bad routing, a bad node or something along the way between you and the endpoint.
Lets say by default, to get to the endpoint your looking at, goes from your house, though rogers backbone, then lets say onto level3 at the border (lets say crossing somewhere near niagra falls, for a visual represntation), then across 1-2 more in the US till the end source.
Now turn on your VPN. Your trying to get to that same endpoint. its routing for how/where it wants you to get there, can be completely different. It might cross to the US at a completely different point.
If that one node there is fine, and the one that rogers is using isn't.. could cause it to be slower on rogers than otherwise.
(I bring up level3 up above, as there was actually an issue a number of years ago, where they actually ran into an issue with IPV4, where they actually RAN OUT of addresses to assign and were essentially overloaded and could not process enough different users data at one time.)
Our phone system at work here, is on a private MPLS network with a few of our locations and the provider. The provider has a few nodes that the locations connect to. Normally our location routes to A, another say to B, etc. (but all are interconnected). But if they need to do work on A, they change how our routing is, that its routing to B instead. Perhaps more latency, etc with it, but allows us to stay up while they bring the one node down.
As for the Linux not being throttled???
IF it was rogers end, generally any throttling etc that has been done, would be overall on the WHOLE speed.
(if you look at it, a house might be able to get the 1gbps package there, but they only pay for the 150. So its throttled down for that). Or its by protocol.
The major throttling they got slapped for, was they were throttling torrent data. Anything using that protocol was throttled, other data wasnt.
A http request say from a windows machine and a linux machine.. SHOULD look the same protocol wise.. so would be throttled the same way?
05-20-2021 11:37 PM
@Gdkitty thank you for your comments; all seems to be good and reasonable points that you raised, but not convincing enough;
- why Rogers would be sending traffic to its dedicated speed test servers thru extra NODES, to increase routing route complexity...that makes little to almost no-sense. If they are doing that, then their network engineering team has some serious thinking to do.... I've used RogersSpeedTest app, which I think is utilizing reputable ookla.
- throttling can be done by a device or by type of internet usage; you raised a question about how come my linux is not being throttled but the rest of 14 devices are...I got a simple answer; the Linux machine is used exclusively for work -always on VPN- never for non work related stuff....the remaining 14 devices are pretty much used for entertainment, socializing, little bit of everything ...etc ---> aka easy target for throttling.
I will bring it up with Rogers Support team just out of curiosity, without high expectations. Most likely I'll get the same attitude as we all usually get from their techie team, paraphrasing "...sir, there is nothing going on with Rogers...its you its not us... " LOL. I'll keep this treat posted on that just for the pure entertainment out of it...
***Please check it out, this is coming from a rather reputable source:
https://broadbandnow.com/guides/am-i-being-throttled
Thx
09-26-2021 08:26 AM
I’m having the exact same problem. I’m paying for 500 Mbps, and my speed test shows 200Mbps. When I turn on my VPN, my speed goes to 480Mbps. When I do a speed test and select a server different from Rogers, I get results from 450 - 600. I tried selecting many different Rogers servers, but they are all the same. About 200 Mbps.
Is there a solution?
02-06-2022 05:36 PM - edited 02-06-2022 05:39 PM
Hi, Start. I think they throttle when your VPN is on (but they won't admit it). No one seems to care or not enough people are complaining as they probably don't realize what the problem is.
My typical speed is 25-30 (25/5 profile) so it's great usually but use a vpn and it eventually goes down to around 3mb or around there (3-5mb and the upload speed is a bit less). This happens all the time, periodically.
01-09-2024 11:04 PM
01-10-2024 12:56 PM
@Micmac1 wrote:
...Upgrade to 1.5gb 50, now I get a single stream at 450mb and 50 up..one of the current issues, well has been for some time is the garbage modems Roger's uses.
Is that WiFi or Ethernet connected? With the 1.5 Gbps plan you need to have an XB7 or XB8 gateway and you need to have your own equipment capable of those speeds since a lot of equipment is not, especially via WiFi. Please see my post and the few that follow in the following link if you have slow speeds.
https://communityforums.rogers.com/t5/Internet/Slow-Speeds/m-p/510588/highlight/true#M75402
01-10-2024 02:47 PM