I'll just lay out all the facts and then what I'm looking into, let me know what y'all think.
I pay for 400 mbps internet. I was getting that a few months ago, no problem. I did a random check again today when I hit a download cap of about 12 MBps which was different from the regular ~30 MBps I could get on any regular download. I had a technician come out here and checked all the wiring, no problems and even tested the internet and we got ~450 mbps when hooked directly to the modem. I checked all the ethernet connections, no problems (my desktop is connected via ethernet); there are also ~10 devices on the network at any given time, but they're not normally pulling data. The tech then said that even if a network is capable of putting out that higher download rate, it will still throttle to the speed of the slowest device. I'm still skeptical of that statement, but I'm looking to setup PfSense and use my existing router to help with the wifi portion. I already have the necessary hardware so I won't be spending any more money on it. Is this the best course of action to help stop the bottlenecking? Or is there something I'm not thinking of?
I pay for 400 mbps internet. I was getting that a few months ago, no problem. I did a random check again today when I hit a download cap of about 12 MBps which was different from the regular ~30 MBps I could get on any regular download. I had a technician come out here and checked all the wiring, no problems and even tested the internet and we got ~450 mbps when hooked directly to the modem. I checked all the ethernet connections, no problems (my desktop is connected via ethernet); there are also ~10 devices on the network at any given time, but they're not normally pulling data. The tech then said that even if a network is capable of putting out that higher download rate, it will still throttle to the speed of the slowest device. I'm still skeptical of that statement, but I'm looking to setup PfSense and use my existing router to help with the wifi portion. I already have the necessary hardware so I won't be spending any more money on it. Is this the best course of action to help stop the bottlenecking? Or is there something I'm not thinking of?