Suspected 'throttling' by TWC . . .

weh

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I've read about throttling and know that the FCC has -- at least, temporarily -- come out against it, including handing out fines for its use. Regardless, I suspect that I am a victim of its practice.

I installed a small utility called NetWorx which monitors communications activity. When I start a download, it indicated a quick ramp up to a level near my theoretical DL maximum (actually, about 85% of TWC's claimed DL speed). However, within about 4-6 minutes (varies somewhat), during an extended download, the pattern changes. I get a series of pulsed data bursts instead of the continuous data stream. As best I can tell, I'm getting about 2.5 seconds at full speed followed by a 7.5 second pause -- 6 per minute. The file download panel in FireFox still reports full speed and predicts download time accordingly; however, actual download time is consistent with my observations -- essentially, 4x the estimated download time (not counting the initial ~5 minutes worth).

And it doesn’t matter which browser I use. I’m getting the same results when I download using Chrome, IE8 and MS’s download manager. (It's happening now, ownloading the new RC files from MS.)

I've experimented with my computers and get full speed transfers over my internal network connections. I've also reconnected my router so that one of my computers "pretends" to be the internet and I “download” files from it (connected to the WAN port) to my newest computer (the one in my specs) and I still get full speed -- no pulses. I can't believe that my computers or router are causing this phenomenon.

Any comments or observations from the resident experts?
 
Last edited:

My Computer My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
home brew
OS
Win.7.Ult.x64
CPU
Intel Core i7 970
Motherboard
Gigabyte GA-X58-UD5
Memory
12GB (6x2GB) OCZ Platinum DDR3 1600
Graphics Card(s)
Gigabyte GV-R485MC-1GH, ATI 4850, 1GB GDDR3, passive cooler
Sound Card
(on-board) Speakers - Klipsch ProMedia 2.1
Monitor(s) Displays
2x Dell U2410 (H-IPS)
Screen Resolution
1920x1200, 1920x1200
Hard Drives
System = Intel 320 160GB SSD --
Data = 2x WD2002FAEX, RAID1 (ICH10R) --
Backup = 5x WD20EARS (eSata port) --
Add'l Storage = 8x WD20EARS, RAID6 (Adaptec 5805)
PSU
PCP&C S75QB
Case
Lian Li PC-V2010B + EX-H34 expansion HD cage
Cooling
Xigmatek HDT-1283 heatsink & bracket + Scythe S-Flex SFF21E
Keyboard
Das Keyboard Professional, Logitech UltraX
Mouse
Logitech G400
Internet Speed
6.85 Mb/s down, 0.35 Mb/s up (typical)
Other Info
Pioneer DVR-217DBK burner --
stock Lian Li case fans + BS-06 PCI 140mm exhaust (all set on 'low')
could be........ could also be the -db noise/ratio at your cable modem, off the pole effectively. What about running modem straight into a pc? same results? what about ping -t your isp dns server(s)..... see what that gives you then email a copy to their support.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
CUSTOM
OS
XP/win7 x86 build 7127
CPU
Athlon64 X2 DUAL 4200+ 2.21ghz
Motherboard
ASUS K8 PRO SLI
Memory
2GB Dual Chan DDR2 Corsair
Graphics Card(s)
Nvidia 6800GT
Sound Card
nvidia
Monitor(s) Displays
19' LCD
Screen Resolution
1280x1024
Hard Drives
WD 250, 2x500, 2x1TB IDE/USB
WD 250 SATA (system)
SEAGATE 120 Sata
PSU
coolermaster 450
Case
SUPERFLOWER
Cooling
1 HDD bay fan, 5x80mm Case Fans, AEROGATE II Fan/Temp
Keyboard
MS wireless
Mouse
MS Wireless
Internet Speed
fassssssssst
could be........ could also be the -db noise/ratio at your cable modem, off the pole effectively. What about running modem straight into a pc? same results? what about ping -t your isp dns server(s)..... see what that gives you then email a copy to their support.
Happens with the cable modem connected directly to the computer, too. (I just tried it.) I don't have a second cable modem to switch out, so can't test that.

The weird thing is the delay. According to speedtest.net, I consistently average about 6.85 Mb/s download speed (upload, 0.35Mb/s; ping, 18-22 ms). I just tried downloading a 3.04GB file (you can guess which one ;)). It 'flowed' perfectly for about 6 minutes 25 seconds before switching over to 'pulse' mode. I paused the download, waited 1 minute, and resumed. It 'pulsed.' I paused again, waited exactly 5 minutes, and resumed. It flowed steadily for about 5 minutes 40 seconds and then began pulsing again. It's like someone -- or, rather, some software -- is watching, just waiting to pounce on a button to trigger the shift in mode.

Big brother is alive and well.... :shock:
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
home brew
OS
Win.7.Ult.x64
CPU
Intel Core i7 970
Motherboard
Gigabyte GA-X58-UD5
Memory
12GB (6x2GB) OCZ Platinum DDR3 1600
Graphics Card(s)
Gigabyte GV-R485MC-1GH, ATI 4850, 1GB GDDR3, passive cooler
Sound Card
(on-board) Speakers - Klipsch ProMedia 2.1
Monitor(s) Displays
2x Dell U2410 (H-IPS)
Screen Resolution
1920x1200, 1920x1200
Hard Drives
System = Intel 320 160GB SSD --
Data = 2x WD2002FAEX, RAID1 (ICH10R) --
Backup = 5x WD20EARS (eSata port) --
Add'l Storage = 8x WD20EARS, RAID6 (Adaptec 5805)
PSU
PCP&C S75QB
Case
Lian Li PC-V2010B + EX-H34 expansion HD cage
Cooling
Xigmatek HDT-1283 heatsink & bracket + Scythe S-Flex SFF21E
Keyboard
Das Keyboard Professional, Logitech UltraX
Mouse
Logitech G400
Internet Speed
6.85 Mb/s down, 0.35 Mb/s up (typical)
Other Info
Pioneer DVR-217DBK burner --
stock Lian Li case fans + BS-06 PCI 140mm exhaust (all set on 'low')
Happens with the cable modem connected directly to the computer, too. (I just tried it.) I don't have a second cable modem to switch out, so can't test that.

The weird thing is the delay. According to speedtest.net, I consistently average about 6.85 Mb/s download speed (upload, 0.35Mb/s; ping, 18-22 ms). I just tried downloading a 3.04GB file (you can guess which one ;)). It 'flowed' perfectly for about 6 minutes 25 seconds before switching over to 'pulse' mode. I paused the download, waited 1 minute, and resumed. It 'pulsed.' I paused again, waited exactly 5 minutes, and resumed. It flowed steadily for about 5 minutes 40 seconds and then began pulsing again. It's like someone -- or, rather, some software -- is watching, just waiting to pounce on a button to trigger the shift in mode.

Big brother is alive and well.... :shock:


yea, sounds like some sort of QOS possibly going on there. I would start bugging the techs, 2nd tier techs to be specific, and keep having them come out and check your lines... i know that most isp's state the "up to" in their contracting words, but also, they have to keep and reach a minimum of 90% of their advertised bandwidth to the customer or you can request them to pro-rate your account till it gets fixed.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
CUSTOM
OS
XP/win7 x86 build 7127
CPU
Athlon64 X2 DUAL 4200+ 2.21ghz
Motherboard
ASUS K8 PRO SLI
Memory
2GB Dual Chan DDR2 Corsair
Graphics Card(s)
Nvidia 6800GT
Sound Card
nvidia
Monitor(s) Displays
19' LCD
Screen Resolution
1280x1024
Hard Drives
WD 250, 2x500, 2x1TB IDE/USB
WD 250 SATA (system)
SEAGATE 120 Sata
PSU
coolermaster 450
Case
SUPERFLOWER
Cooling
1 HDD bay fan, 5x80mm Case Fans, AEROGATE II Fan/Temp
Keyboard
MS wireless
Mouse
MS Wireless
Internet Speed
fassssssssst
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