  JimFlorida
@bellsouth.net
| AT&T=Bellsouth Speed Throttling with uTorrent??
Without Utorrent program active, my download speed is 5.8 MBits per second. If I open up uTorrent, the download speed immediately goes way down to 200 Kbits per second.
This seems to be a new policy for Bellsouth and bit Torrents? Has anything been said officially about it.
Anyone experiencing the same? I am paying quite a bit for the higher download speed, why the degradation in service? |
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  brandon Some truth included in this post. Premium join:2003-03-31 Hurley, MS
·AT&T Southeast
·CableOne
·Packet8
1 edit | There is no uTorrent block with AT&T.
Are you saying that while downloading from uTorrent, uTorrent reports your download speed as 200kb/s, or that when downloading from uTorrent, another speed test reports your download speed as 200kb/s?
Are you uploading or downloading anything while uTorrent is open, or is the program just open with no files downloading or uploading? |
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  JimFlorida
@bellsouth.net
| When I do the speed.fastaccess.com Bellsouth Speedtest, I usually get 5.8 Mbits download speed.
If I open up utorrent and use it to download/upload a torrent at any speed 24Kb/sec plus, the speed.fastaccess.com test result goes down to 180 Kbits/sec , from 5.8 Mbits. |
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  karthwyne
join:2003-04-27 Atlanta, GA
·AT&T Southeast
| reply to JimFlorida yes, as brandon stated, there is no throttling occurring. if utorrent is active, it will of course affect speedtest results. the speeds reported in transfers in utorrent are shown in kB/s, speedtests in kb/s. so assuming you could find a file to max your download, you would not get better than about 700kB/s, but the number of connections, and many other factors would affect this. |
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 upb Premium join:2004-03-15 Carriere, MS
·AT&T Southeast
| reply to JimFlorida said by brandon :There is no uTorrent block with AT&T. Agreed.
Slow torrent download speed is typical of a file which isn't very popular. Torrent will find only one or two other users who have the parts of the file you need, and your download speed will be limited by their upload speeds. If you are using a NAT router to access the net, it is also possible to fill your router's connection tables, preventing any new connections, or even causing your router to lock up. |
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 FAQFixer Premium join:2004-06-28 Powder Springs, GA | Also don't forget that even a small amount of upload traffic can have a dramatic effect on download speeds. |
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  JimFlorida
@bellsouth.net | reply to upb Let me clarify. I am referring to the general Internet download speeds measured by speed.fastaccess.com, not my torrent download speeds.
5.8 Mbits down to 180Kbits, effecting all programs, not just uTorrent. |
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  mikes60 Stop Socialism Now Premium join:2001-07-31 Boynton Beach, FL
·AT&T Southeast
| As I remember from the FastAccess test page, as well as other speed test pages, they all tell you not to use your internet connection during the testing.
If uTorrent is using up most of your band width, your test will show just what is not being used by uTorreent, or any other download. -- No good deed goes unpunished. |
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 Airwolf7 Premium join:2004-12-12 Franklin, KY
·AT&T Southeast
| reply to JimFlorida
 FastAccess Xtreme 6.0 uTorrent at wide open. |
Looks good here. |
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 Airwolf7 Premium join:2004-12-12 Franklin, KY
·AT&T Southeast
| reply to FAQFixer said by FAQFixer :Also don't forget that even a small amount of upload traffic can have a dramatic effect on download speeds. Yes when I'm downloading I limit uTorrent to an upload of 6KBps and I can get about 100KBps more download throughput. When I'm done downloading I will let it seed for awhile at 53KBps unless I'm going to be surfing then I limit it to 35KBps.
I got to make room for all those ACKs and other overhead. |
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  Mizzat Will post for thumbs Premium join:2003-05-03 Atlanta, GA | reply to Airwolf7 I've had no speed problems using uTorrent. Internet speed tests are always inaccurate, because you are connecting to a volitile network, with a volitile connection.
Nice Airwolf, Slackware! More of a man than I, I love my SuSE. |
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  karthwyne
join:2003-04-27 Atlanta, GA
·AT&T Southeast
| reply to JimFlorida if your upload is near max, then your speedtest results will suffer because the testing server has to wait for replies from your PC that tell it it received the data, and those replies just get put in line with the data you are uploading.
another factor would be that you have 6M service. if you are using 3M with utorrent, then the speedtest could never get better than 3M (3+3=6). there are many other factors that affect this on top of the fluctuations in torrent speeds and the max connections you can have, so i would suspect that this is all expected behaviour. |
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 NormanS Premium,MVM join:2001-02-14 San Jose, CA
·Pacific Bell - SBC
| reply to JimFlorida
 AT&T Speed Test with BitTornado running. | .jpg/thumb.jpg) AT&T Speed Test, no BitTornado download. |
I can't run 'speed.fastaccess.com' because my IP address is from AT&T West. I can run the speed test here:
»helpme.att.net/dsl/speedtest/
One of the screen shots shows the result with a couple of torrents underway. Without the torrents I get about 2,500kbps/425kbps on the test.
The SpeedStream 4100 DSL modem I am using reportedly has ACK packet prioritization enabled. I don't suffer loss of surfing speed, even when the BT upload is saturated, so I guess that the report is true.
Even so, the speed test results are impacted by the torrents. It is, after all, shared bandwidth; i.e., your DSL bandwidth is shared between your apps (and any other users, if you have a LAN).
I have the 'at&t Yahoo! HSI Pro' package. 3008kpbs/512kbps. -- Norman ~Oh Lord, why have you come ~To Konnyu, with the Lion and the Drum |
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  ropeguru Premium join:2001-01-25 Hollywood, FL clubs:
·VOIPo
| reply to JimFlorida Ok, from reading all the posts, I think there is a misunderstanding.
I think what the OP is trying to say is that with uTorrent not running and nothing using his internet connection, he is getting good speeds at around 5.8Mbps. He is happy with that.
Once he starts up uTorrent and uTorrent is only downloading a mere 2hKbps, the speed test drops to 180 Kbps. Which, if uTorrent is only downloading at dialup speed, he should still see 5+Mbps on the speed test. THis I agree with.
Only two scenarios I can think of going on here. Issues with his router handling uTorrent or before the download speeds actually get going, uTorrent is allowing the upload to be saturated causing downloads to slow because the ACK packets get not get back upstream.
Was that clear as mud??  -- FWD#: 223611 |
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  JimFlorida
@bellsouth.net
| I am using a Westel 6100 modem. Supposedly, this has a "Turbo TCP" setting available, but I am not sure if BS has shut down this option.
If I type in launchmodem the address field, I see the BS settings, but no provision to enable Turbo TCP.
Is there a way to do it? I think that would solve the problem. Where can I access that setting? |
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 nokiatech
join:2000-10-18 Stuart, FL
·Comcast
·AT&T Southeast
| reply to ropeguru I think you are misunderstanding the answers here. If he is uploading ANYTHING with the torrent client it will adversly affect his download speed. Chances are good his upload is being pegged when he launches that client therefor showing a very slow download in a speed test. He torrent download speed in this case will also be very low but in the end has nothing to do with the speedtest. |
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  JimFlorida
@bellsouth.net
| What exactly is Turbo TCP
I have the Westell 6100 modem and noticed the turbo tcp option... What exactly does this do? I searched on it but only saw one person said it was good if you ftp alot. What about gaming (ie: cod2)?
Thanks. to forum · permalink · · 2005-12-21 02:02:09 ·
JohnInSJ Premium join:2003-09-22 San Jose, CA ·SONIC.NET
Turbo TCP is da bomb... basically this does traffic shaping on the modem (which is really the best place for it) for outbound traffic. It makes sure ACK packets (which are sent out, when traffic is coming in, to acknowledge each packet received) get out before any packets you are trying to send out.
Normally, a massive upload (say, P2P software or even a file upload) that fills your upload pipe 100% will kill your download speed. So on a 1.5M/256k DSL line, sending 20-22KB/sec out will choke your uplink pipe, and downloads will crawl at about 20-30KB/sec.
If you turn on TurboTCP, and re-do this same scenario, your upload speed will remain about the same, maybe .5KB/sec slower, but your download speed at the same time will be much closer to your max download speed - because TurboTCP is putting the ACK packets 'in front' of the rest of the packets fighting to get out of your modem.
Turn it on, there is *no* downside.
How do I turn on TurboTCP with Bellsouth? Have they disabled this option? |
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 NormanS Premium,MVM join:2001-02-14 San Jose, CA
·Pacific Bell - SBC
| said by JimFlorida :
How do I turn on TurboTCP with Bellsouth? Have they disabled this option? I don't know about the Westell 6100. My SpeedStream 4100 has a similar feature, but it is just "on"; no configuration. -- Norman ~Oh Lord, why have you come ~To Konnyu, with the Lion and the Drum |
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 Airwolf7 Premium join:2004-12-12 Franklin, KY
·AT&T Southeast
| reply to JimFlorida TurboTCP is no longer an option that can be toggled on and off on the AT&T Southeast/BellSouth Westell 6100 modem/routers. TurboTCP either caused problems with some things and they eliminated it, or TurboTCP worked so good and never caused problems so they just built it into the firmware being always turned on. Another possibility is that they just forgot about TurboTCP and did not put it into the newer firmwares. When TurboTCP was an option that could be toggled on and off I played with it and it did make a nice improvement when it was turned on.
Hold on someone is knocking at my door I be back later to ask you to describe your problems in more detail. |
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  ropeguru Premium join:2001-01-25 Hollywood, FL clubs:
·VOIPo
| reply to nokiatech said by nokiatech :I think you are misunderstanding the answers here. If he is uploading ANYTHING with the torrent client it will adversly affect his download speed. Chances are good his upload is being pegged when he launches that client therefor showing a very slow download in a speed test. He torrent download speed in this case will also be very low but in the end has nothing to do with the speedtest. I think I understand COMPLETELY, as that is what I said in my post. -- FWD#: 223611 |
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