New
#21
So this is what the tool came up with for me. Being in a very large apartment complex [over 50 buildings with 8 units each] I wasn't surpised to see 27 access points nearby.
Picasa Web Albums - 11353079070350824... - Misc. Stuff
So this is what the tool came up with for me. Being in a very large apartment complex [over 50 buildings with 8 units each] I wasn't surpised to see 27 access points nearby.
Picasa Web Albums - 11353079070350824... - Misc. Stuff
That is what thing I was thinking becuase I know in that router there is a ECO friendly setting that will disable his router during certain times of the day, but it literly disables the signal or any kinds of internet activity, it just does not lower his bandwith.
that is why i had his restore his defaults becuase by default, that setting is turned off.
In the end....I would try a different router.
I know its a last end result but it just maybe something that its not a proper mixture between your ISP and the chip inside that perticular router.
In regards to the "eco" mode: I have it turned off so it shouldn't be disabling it at any point in time.
Before I go out and splurge for another router, I am going to try two more things: PS3 via wireless during the time frame, and another wireless adapter during the time frame to see if I have the same effect. That way, I can narrow down if it's my laptop or not. It just seems weird it would lose the connection to ANYTHING on the network but the connection status never reflects these changes.
Sounds like 'data collision' muffling rather than preventing communication. Still weird about the timing though- could there be a wireless network controlling the lighting in your apartment block? (8pm-5am)
The lights come one at 6:30pm and are off at around 7am. The only thing that turns off and on during that time period are the sprinklers (3am-4am). It doesn't seem like it happens in a pattern either. One night it could be 9:14, 10:12, 12:06, 2:00, 3:13, 4:41 and the next night 9:30, 11:00, 12:15, 2:45, 3:30; 4:14. It doesn't seem to be consistent in terms of the gaps.
Just out of curiosity, could someone overload the router's ability to serve packets via wireless from the outside?
I have a lot of experience inside a computer, but networking is where I know the least.
It does not take very much interfereance to severely reduce Wi-Fi thorughput. 27 acess points nereby? I'm surprised it works much at all frankly.
And when does everyone get home from work, then game all night? Is the cut off pattern the same for weekends as week days or does it change? I'd put money on the entire Wi-Fi space just being impossibly crowded in the evneing shen everyone is home and on the net.
And microwave ovens blast the entire Wi-Fi spectrum for a LONG ways, anyone above you, below or off to the side can take out your connection by running their microwave.
The Wi-Spy works pretty well. If you have the money to pop it's a nice tool. Really interesting to see just how much 2.4 radiation that they leak when operating. :) It's no coincidence either, microwave ovens are in fact the reason that the 2.4GHz band is free for cunsumer use. They destroyed it for much of anything officially reliable so they let it go to civilian use. Though lately the military has been taking it back and have been putting in some high power 2.4 equipment
InSSIDer stated 27 at one point, Windows only picks up 8-12 depending on where I am at.
I use my microwave all the time, even with my laptop right next to it from time to time while in the kitchen and have never had it kill my connection. I might get cancer some day but that's a different story.
And yes, it's consistent with weekends as well.
Mmm - it's the time thing bugging me here - but just recalling a recent problem I attended where 2 x laptops in the same room and 1 had intermittent connection issues the other was fine and both had same set-ups. It turned out to be JSW driver on the faulty one - but the time issue is still niggling away............
UPDATE: I was able to go through the night with only a minor hiccup. I decided to set my PS3 up to run off the wireless with me and the hiccup I had was not reflected on the console as someone was playing MW2. The ping wasn't affected at all. My machine was experiencing ~2000ms for about 10 minutes than returned to normal but didn't fully time out at any time.