10-31-2018 03:37 PM
Solved! Go to Solution.
10-31-2018 08:42 PM
3 weeks ago
The numbers you’re seeing on 2.4GHz (35–40 Mbps with occasional drops to 10 Mbps) and ~70 Mbps on 5GHz can be considered within a normal range depending on interference, channel width, and AP density. 2.4GHz is especially prone to congestion and performance fluctuations, which also explains the ping spikes you’re seeing between wired and wireless devices. This kind of jitter usually comes from interference, roaming behavior, or airtime contention rather than a hardware fault. Interestingly, in gaming communities, performance scaling matters a lot too—for example in manok na pula max level all chicken, progression and efficiency depend heavily on optimizing resources and timing strategies.
3 weeks ago
What AP model are you using, and how many clients are typically connected to each access point when you’re seeing these speed issues?
02-01-2026 02:26 AM
It sounds like you’re experiencing typical challenges with 2.4 GHz networks, especially when multiple devices are connected. Many users find that throughput can fluctuate due to interference or distance, while 5 GHz usually offers more stable speeds. One approach I’ve found helpful is optimizing channel selection and testing with tools like iperf for more consistent results. For related tips on simple ways to boost home networking performance, you might also check out Corn Dip with Cream Cheese it’s a surprisingly effective guide for improving device connectivity and minimizing latency spikes.
11-02-2018 06:31 PM