tipsy Posted April 30 Posted April 30 Link speed (Receive/Transmit): 100/100 (Mbps) Link-local IPv6 address: IPv4 address: IPv4 DNS servers: Primary DNS suffix: bbrouter Manufacturer: Intel Description: Intel(R) Ethernet Controller (3) I225-V Driver version: 1.1.4.43 Physical address (MAC): So, I upgraded my internet speed from 100Mbps to 200Mbps, but on PC, the speed is stuck below 100Mbps. On mobile, speed is fine. I talked to the ISP, he said the problem is at my end. I need to update drivers. I tried a few steps here and there, but I couldn't get the problem fixed. 1) Tried updating the driver via the device manager (I'm not sure they got updated or any other way to update them) 2) via device manager, updated setting for "speed and duplex" to "auto-negotiation" (which was "1gbps full duplex" previously). 1 Quote
Leader RedBaird Posted April 30 Leader Posted April 30 (edited) MOVED what I first wrote here to the bottom of the post! 😄 My ethernet cable from my gateway to computer is a CAT-5e. AH, it looks like CAT-5 is limited to 100mb! @Leatherface May be onto something! 😄 My speed is 640mb up and 39.6 down. I will have to check my provider now to see if that is what I should be getting. Quote Here's a breakdown of some common Ethernet cable categories: Cat-5: . Supports 10/100 Mbps speeds at up to 100 MHz bandwidth, suitable for basic home and small office networks. Cat-5e: . An enhanced version of Cat-5, supporting 1 Gbps speeds at 100 MHz bandwidth, suitable for home and small office networks. MOVED: You could try turning your modem/router/gateway off and on to make sure it "understands" the upgrade you paid for. You could also run the "network troubleshooter" by right-clicking on the taskbar icon (on my system, far right). From that icon you can 'trouble shoot problems' and 'open network and internet settings" (if you have Windows 10, like I do). Edited April 30 by RedBaird MOVED some lines 1 1 Quote
Leader RedBaird Posted April 30 Leader Posted April 30 Just now, tipsy said: I changed the cable, and it worked. thanks. ALL CREDIT to @Leatherface !!! What cable type did you change it to, or was the cable just broken? Quote
tipsy Posted April 30 Author Posted April 30 1 hour ago, RedBaird said: ALL CREDIT to @Leatherface !!! What cable type did you change it to, or was the cable just broken? The current cat cable was old, and there was no print on it mentioning what type it was. So I found a new spare cat5, got it replaced, and boom. 2 5 Quote
Puni Posted Thursday at 03:01 PM Posted Thursday at 03:01 PM (edited) On 4/30/2025 at 1:05 PM, tipsy said: The current cat cable was old, and there was no print on it mentioning what type it was. So I found a new spare cat5, got it replaced, and boom. Sorry for the late response on this topic, but to get over 100Mbps, you need a cable above Cat5, at least Cat5e. ** Last two 7 & 8 are not usually provided for house services. @tipsy --> So, if you ever upgrade for 1Gbps, make sure your total BW doesn't cap 100, otherwise you should change your current Cat5e to CAT6. Edited Thursday at 03:05 PM by Puni 2 Quote
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