2 weeks ago - last edited 2 weeks ago by RogersYasmine
I am in Richmond HIll (L4C) and I recently switched from Fido to Rogers and since the switch there's been packet loss and latency issues. The latency and packetloss will sporadically occur the day; it's worse in the afternoon/night, but some mornings are bad as well.
A tech came out a few weeks ago and replaced replaced the XB6 modem I had with another XB6 modem, which didn't solve the issue, but reduced the "Uncorrectable Codewords" count I was seeing on the "Rogers Network" page.
Here's the technical information from the "Rogers Network" page:
Downstream | Channel Bonding Value | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Channel ID | 17 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 | 32 | 33 |
Lock Status | Locked | Locked | Locked | Locked | Locked | Locked | Locked | Locked | Locked | Locked | Locked | Locked | Locked | Locked | Locked | Locked | Locked | Locked | Locked | Locked | Locked | Locked | Locked | Locked | Locked | Locked | Locked | Locked | Locked | Locked | Locked | Locked | Locked |
Frequency | 657 MHz | 279 MHz | 849 MHz | 855 MHz | 861 MHz | 579 MHz | 585 MHz | 591 MHz | 597 MHz | 603 MHz | 609 MHz | 615 MHz | 621 MHz | 633 MHz | 639 MHz | 645 MHz | 651 MHz | 663 MHz | 669 MHz | 675 MHz | 681 MHz | 687 MHz | 693 MHz | 699 MHz | 705 MHz | 711 MHz | 717 MHz | 723 MHz | 825 MHz | 831 MHz | 837 MHz | 843 MHz | 350000000 |
SNR | 44.1 dB | 44.5 dB | 43.4 dB | 43.7 dB | 43.6 dB | 43.8 dB | 43.8 dB | 43.9 dB | 44.3 dB | 44.2 dB | 44.0 dB | 43.6 dB | 43.8 dB | 44.0 dB | 44.0 dB | 44.1 dB | 43.9 dB | 44.1 dB | 44.0 dB | 42.7 dB | 43.5 dB | 43.4 dB | 43.4 dB | 43.3 dB | 43.2 dB | 43.2 dB | 43.3 dB | 43.5 dB | 44.1 dB | 43.9 dB | 44.0 dB | 43.8 dB | 41.7 dB |
Power Level | 0.4 dBmV | 0.3 dBmV | 1.7 dBmV | 1.8 dBmV | 1.6 dBmV | 0.2 dBmV | 0.3 dBmV | 0.0 dBmV | 0.9 dBmV | 0.6 dBmV | 0.1 dBmV | 0.1 dBmV | 0.0 dBmV | 0.4 dBmV | 0.4 dBmV | 0.4 dBmV | 0.4 dBmV | 0.8 dBmV | 0.6 dBmV | 0.0 dBmV | 0.4 dBmV | 0.3 dBmV | 0.2 dBmV | 0.3 dBmV | 0.4 dBmV | 0.6 dBmV | 0.1 dBmV | 0.1 dBmV | 2.7 dBmV | 2.4 dBmV | 2.5 dBmV | 2.1 dBmV | 1.4 dBmV |
Modulation | 256 QAM | 256 QAM | 256 QAM | 256 QAM | 256 QAM | 256 QAM | 256 QAM | 256 QAM | 256 QAM | 256 QAM | 256 QAM | 256 QAM | 256 QAM | 256 QAM | 256 QAM | 256 QAM | 256 QAM | 256 QAM | 256 QAM | 256 QAM | 256 QAM | 256 QAM | 256 QAM | 256 QAM | 256 QAM | 256 QAM | 256 QAM | 256 QAM | 256 QAM | 256 QAM | 256 QAM | 256 QAM | OFDM |
Upstream |
Channel Bonding Value
|
|||
Channel ID | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 |
Lock Status | Locked | Locked | Locked | Locked |
Frequency | 21 MHz | 25 MHz | 32 MHz | 38 MHz |
Symbol Rate | 2560 | 5120 | 5120 | 5120 |
Power Level | 37.3 dBmV | 40.0 dBmV | 39.3 dBmV | 38.3 dBmV |
Modulation | QAM | QAM | QAM | QAM |
Channel Type | TDMA_AND_ATDMA | ATDMA | ATDMA | ATDMA |
CM Error Codewords
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Channel ID | 17 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 | 32 | 33 |
Unerrored Codewords | 1541311580 | 2500769128 | 2500777652 | 2500779591 | 2500812011 | 2500807285 | 2500833379 | 2500845847 | 2500862797 | 2500877560 | 2500886364 | 2500900606 | 2500897338 | 2500891122 | 2500906404 | 2500909704 | 2500930216 | 2500941092 | 2500924023 | 2500939319 | 2500946570 | 2500952911 | 2500946364 | 2500951403 | 2500965728 | 2500971490 | 2500983460 | 2500989628 | 2500992249 | 2500992438 | 2501014454 | 2500994042 | 1541311580 |
Correctable Codewords | 567321988 | 1790 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 424 | 15 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 567321988 |
Uncorrectable Codewords | 50 | 203 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 170 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 50 |
I've been glancing over at Ping Plotter, when I notice issues with the internet, specifically Video conferencing stalls/disconnects (MS Teams, Zoom), Streaming video or music stalls (Twitch, Youtube, Spotify), online gaming or websites that are slow to load. Here's my latest screenshot from pingplotter today @ 1:39pm (10 minute) --
The red vertical bars indicate 100% packetloss. Whenever a stall happens, it's usually due to this packetloss or the extremely high ping, which goes up to ~2500ms and is extremely noticeable if I'm in an online game (rubberbanding occurs, disconnection icon appears, or just stay in place for a few seconds) -- this is brutal when I'm doing any kind of team content and I become the liability.
Here a more documented instances --
12/06/2024 @ 1:07pm (10 minute) --
12/06/2024 @ 12:53pm (10 minute) --
12/06/2024 @ 12:02 pm (60 minute) --
12/06/2024 @ 11:53am (10 minute) -
12/06/2024 @ 11:09am (10 minute) --
12/01/2024 @ 2:47pm (10 minute), relatively good ping w/100% packetloss at 2:43pm --
12/01/2024 @1:13pm (10 minute) --
11/30/2024 @ 10:12pm (4 minute) --
I have others as well, but you see the issue. I don't know if this is due to congestion or what, but the latency and the packetloss are very frequent throughout the day.
What can be done to solve this and if there's any other information I can provide, please let me know.
Thanks,
Shawn
**Labels Updated**
2 weeks ago
@PB99 wrote: I recently switched from Fido to Rogers
Are you "gaming" through your mobile-phone, using "data" on your cell-phone?
If so, your device should be connecting to the same cell-phone towers, bypassing your XB6 router. Because Rogers owns Fido, they "share" towers, in most urban locations. Thus, your "switch" should not make a difference.
If not, then are you connecting via WiFi between your device and the cable-modem, and then "out" to the Rogers network (coaxial-cable on the XB6/XB7/XB8 cable-modems) or via WiFi to a receiver "up" on some local telephone pole? If so, then look at the Rogers cable-plant infrastructure, or that WiFi receiver, as the problematic connection. Presumably, once your packets enter the Rogers fiber-optic network, there should be no packet-loss.
The latency and packet-loss will sporadically occur the day; it's worse in the afternoon/night, but some mornings are bad as well.
So, where is the packet-loss & latency? From your device to the XB6 inside your home, or out to the telephone pole, or within Rogers fiber-optic network?
Probably, not within your home (unless you live in a MURB [Multiple Unit Residential Building] where the WAN port on the XB6 connects to a "concentrator" inside the "wiring closet" in your building, and then there is a single connection out to the Rogers infrastructure. If you are in a single-family home, it could be the cable from your home out to the nearest telephone-pole,
Possibly, the Rogers infrastructure within your neighbourhood is "saturated" at various times of the day, e.g., "afternoon/night", when residents in your neighbourhood make more usage of the Internet.
A tech came out a few weeks ago and replaced replaced the XB6 modem I had with another XB6 modem, which didn't solve the issue,
As expected. So, the WiFi inside the previous XB6 is just as good as the WiFi inside the current XB6.
But, if you are "gaming" through a desktop computer, you are probably not using your in-home WiFi. Instead, you probably have an Ethernet cable between your computer and the XB6. Have you tried a different Ethernet cable?
Contact Support. Their Agent can remotely logon to the XB6, to view its internal statistics, e.g., "signal strength" reaching it. Poor signal strength could be your issue. If so, a service-call from a technician will need to be scheduled, to investigate your cables.
2 weeks ago
Further, the first screen-capture of PingPlotter is showing "count" values of ZERO. Why not non-zero ???
Later captures show a count of "24", e.g., to "99.228.100.1".
The ".1" suffix for this IPi-address implies a Rogers network router, rather than an IP-address assigned to any customer in your local neighbourhood.
So, the timings to that "local" computer are very large -- they should be in the range of 5 to 8 milliseconds. That might be the issue, right there, namely a saturated network close to your part of your city.
2 weeks ago
I forgot to to mention that my computer is connected directly to the XB6 via ethernet cable. Now that I'm recalling the tech visit, he never ran any tests inside the house for signal strength (didn't see what he was doing outside). He suggested the issue could be the lines coming into my house or congestion in the area.
Thank you for your insight and analysis, I'll give support a call today.
2 weeks ago
@PB99 wrote: he never ran any tests inside the house for signal strength
He may have had a hand-held meter that electronically would do those tests.
the issue could be the lines coming into my house
I have seen a technician cut the connectors off both ends of that coaxial cable, and put on new connectors, to see if that would make a difference. Doing so would be relatively quick and easy -- "snip and crimp" -- with the correct tools. Did he?
2 weeks ago
@MDK-2024 wrote:the issue could be the lines coming into my house
I have seen a technician cut the connectors off both ends of that coaxial cable, and put on new connectors, to see if that would make a difference. Doing so would be relatively quick and easy -- "snip and crimp" -- with the correct tools. Did he?
No, he just looked at where the lines came in and checked if they were tightened snugly.