Also when ever I call the isp they are never able to solve the issueYou have to be careful with pingplotter. To show a actual problem you would see packet loss in hop 2 and every hop past that point generally getting slightly worse. If you get get loss in hop 2 but say hop 3 is fine then it is a testing issue, routers are designed to favor passing traffic to responding to ping/trace. So the router may just be ignoring your test traffic rather than a actual problem.
If you really have a problem in hop 2 the good news is this is the easiest to get the ISP to fix. This represents the connection between your house and the ISP. Generally it is some kind of wiring issue but be sure to connect your modem/router to a point as close as possible to where it enters your house. The ISP will attempt to blame the cable inside your house.
You also want to use actual ping commands rather than ping plotter when you talk to the ISP. Show them that you see no loss to your router IP (ie hop 1) but see loss to their router (hop 2). Most level 1 tech are not going to know what pingplotter is but some at least know the normal ping command. Prevents them from trying to blame pingplotter as the cause.
When I ping to hop 1 no packet loss but hop 2 has 93 percent packet lossSo what does ping plotter show. If it also gets 100% loss in hop 2 that means nothing. Obviously all traffic can not be getting discarded at hop 2 if you can even sometimes access web sites. Key is to find the hop where you start to see loss that continues all the way to the end including the end IP. Testing to 8.8.8.8 tends to be a good ip.
The end result at 8.8.8.8 is 5 percent packet lossWhen I ping to hop 1 no packet loss but hop 2 has 93 percent packet loss
Hop 3 gets 4.6 packet lossSo how much loss does hop 3 get.
Again you need to find the first hop that gets errors. If it really gets errors at hop 2 and every hop past it then there really is some problem with the connection to your house.
Yea I replaced the modem and I have the same issues so I don’t really know what to do nowThis pretty much shows there is a problem with the connection to your house. All you can do is talk to the ISP. I means you already tried the only thing you control which is replacing the modem. Everything else is outside your house. Be sure to test connected to where the cable comes into the house, it can actually be the wires in your walls.