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RolledUp20s

macrumors regular
Original poster
Jun 14, 2011
243
0
Wrexham, North Wales
i have the macbook air mid 2011 - its the 13'' model, 4GB, 1.7 Ghz i5.
i recently upgraded my broadband to fibre optic and i should be getting 66Meg Max, however..drop 10Mbps from the exchange...they guestimate around 56Mbps average download speeds for me. Now, when i run speedtest..the best i've seen is 31Mbps DL and 17 Upload. it tends to be more like 27Mbps DL though...so i'm getting half of what i should be. when the engineer was here with his ''ahem-windows laptop'' he was getting 56Mbps on my wifi..so, im curious as to what the macbook air can handle on wifi? or are there any other tests i can do? sadly having no ethernet port on the air..i can't try a cabled connection to see if i am actually getting 56bps.

cheers anyways.
 
Last edited:
Nov 28, 2010
22,670
30
located
Just to clarify, with "Meg" (short for "Mega") do you mean Mb/s (Megabit/s) or MB/s (MegaByte/s)? What is the shown Transmit Rate when you OPTION click the WiFi / AirPort icon in the Menu Bar?
 

RolledUp20s

macrumors regular
Original poster
Jun 14, 2011
243
0
Wrexham, North Wales
just turned my wi-fi off on the mac, left it 10secs, turned back on and now i just got





although, ping is higher? ive seen that on 10 before..

----------

now we're talking...



thats on a server further away aswel? ..well, im in wrexham...40miles from liverpool...thats saying 150 & that im closer to london?? WTF?
 

RandomKamikaze

macrumors 6502a
Jan 8, 2009
900
56
UK
just turned my wi-fi off on the mac, left it 10secs, turned back on and now i just got


[url=http://www.speedtest.net/result/2515373326.png]Image[/URL]


although, ping is higher? ive seen that on 10 before..

----------

now we're talking...
[url=http://www.speedtest.net/result/2515379956.png]Image[/URL]


thats on a server further away aswel? ..well, im in wrexham...40miles from liverpool...thats saying 150 & that im closer to london?? WTF?

Depends where your ISP breaks out. I'm on Virgin which breaks out in Basingstoke which is about 20 miles away from me.

Is your WiFi a, b, g or n?
 

RolledUp20s

macrumors regular
Original poster
Jun 14, 2011
243
0
Wrexham, North Wales
well, i have just used the new sky router that they sent out. i do have a netgear n300 but found 5Ghz not a good connection around the house and possibly interferes with the wiiU gamepad connection (but that's another story)

So, using sky's new router this is the following i get when OPTION on wifi :

PHY MODE: 802.11n
channel: 11 (2.4GHz)
RSSI: -46
TRANSMIT RATE: 130
MCS INDEX : 15

So, whats all that meen then?

cheers guys
 

RolledUp20s

macrumors regular
Original poster
Jun 14, 2011
243
0
Wrexham, North Wales
i notice the thread titled 'i dropped my macbook air on the floor and..'' (or something similar) has received more views and responses than my actual question.

now, if you tech guys could please concentrate on the real matters at problem here? ;)

much appreciated
 

KerryH

macrumors newbie
Feb 17, 2013
5
0
You can't trouble shoot your internal network going strictly off speedtests that are affected by things outside of your house.

You need to start with troubleshooting your network. Do you have another pc on the network that you can use to do a file transfer to, and record the speeds achieved there? This will tell you if your network is performing up to par as speed tests can give unstable results.
 

Skoopman

macrumors 6502
Sep 24, 2011
318
2
It's certainly not a MBA issue. I have 120 Mbps over here and it's not a problem:

2517462817.png


Your problem could be:

- the speedtest server is too slow
- your line does not offer more speed
- the router can not offer more speed (what model is it exactly, can you connect on 5 GHz?)

So you could try and download a heavily seeded (legal) torrent, a Linux distro for example, and see if you get more speed.
 

RandomKamikaze

macrumors 6502a
Jan 8, 2009
900
56
UK
To be honest wi-fi is not an accurate way to do speed tests.

You really need to try it with a wired adaptor. I am on Virgin's 120Mbps fibre service and my wi-fi won't see speeds over ~40mbps DL and ~5Mbps upload.

If I connect an Ethernet cable I will get the full service.

Also, does your provider do any traffic throttling at the times you are trying to test?
 

bolen

macrumors 6502
Jul 22, 2008
351
0
Sweden
WiFI performance is very, I mean *very*, dependent on many things such as distance to the access point, walls in between, what types of wall, the tech hardware specs, channels, disturbance, the access point chipsets configuration, the computers chipsets, vendor specific optimizations etc. etc...

The Air still only have a 2x2x2 configuration (2 send and receive antennas with 2 spatial streams) which ideally gives 300 Mbps theoretical bandwidth. The Macbook Pro have the newer 3x3x3 configuration which theoretically gives up to 450 Mbps. This is of course requiring the access point to support 3x3x3 also.

What kind of access point/router do you have to serve the WiFi-network? What's the setup? Do you have a lot of other wifi networks in the area? Do you have other devices on the same frequency in between your devices (such as a microwave oven, wireless phones, bluetooth devices etc)?
 

BigYellow

macrumors member
Dec 19, 2006
92
0
Canada
Make SURE that your router is properly configured for 802.11N. 802.11G has a theoretical capacity of 55Mbps if I'm not mistaken, and once you take into account the wireless "overhead", your results of 36-44Mbps would be about right.
 
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