Starlink

   / Starlink #3,911  
I have a question about speed tests, on the Starlink ap. it has a speed test and then it has an advanced speed test. When I run these one right after the other there is usually a very big difference the two which should you go by. Example I just ran both speed test 37 mps advanced 125 mps download upload speed 14 and 17mps
 
   / Starlink #3,912  
I have a question about speed tests, on the Starlink ap. it has a speed test and then it has an advanced speed test. When I run these one right after the other there is usually a very big difference the two which should you go by. Example I just ran both speed test 37 mps advanced 125 mps download upload speed 14 and 17mps
Yes, I have also noticed it often enough to think it is real. In my experience, it isn't just speed tests. With multiple downloads, the first is slower than the subsequent ones.

My hunch is that Starlink uses some sort of dynamic bandwidth allocation. So, if we are puttering around on TBN not using much more than a few Mbits/s of total bandwidth, it will allocate a bandwidth block of, say several times that, 10Mbits/s. When we fire up a speed test, the system gets caught out, and takes a minute or so to respond, before it has enough allocated to our link to run at full speed. So the second test is faster. I have run a speed test sequentially on different speed test sites, and the effect is the same, so Starlink isn't just buffering up one site.

I have also noticed that the Starlink system seems to take a while to drift down to the lower bandwidth allocation. YMMV.

All the best,

Peter
 
   / Starlink #3,913  
Hey, guys, I am very interested in the reliability issues. I teach online, so I cannot have my Internet service go down for even a second. How often do you get old is it and how long do they last?
I'd have to say that Starlink has been more reliable than pretty much any ISP I've ever had, and I've been around a long time. Other than a couple full system outages that everyone has experienced and maybe 3 times in 2.5 years where heavy rain or snow faded the signal it just works. I'm in IT and WFH. I'm online via VPN to my company all the time. In fact, usuall the VPN stays connected for as many days as it takes for their side to boot me off for hitting max online time (10 days?). My wife also is WFH. I'm on Teams/WebEx/Zoom meetings at least 50% of the day with no video, sharing or audio issues.

Your mileage will vary if you have any obstructions to your dish. But if you have a spot where the dish is unobstructed you should have very reliable Internet service.
 
   / Starlink #3,914  
We are due for some rain tomorrow. My neighbor expects I'll lose signal. When we had DTV years ago it would be bad during the worst storms, but largely a non- issue. Tech has improved. I think I may bet him a cold Modelo.
 
   / Starlink #3,915  
We are due for some rain tomorrow. My neighbor expects I'll lose signal. When we had DTV years ago it would be bad during the worst storms, but largely a non- issue. Tech has improved. I think I may bet him a cold Modelo.
It's not so much the tech but the frequency & power levels. Higher frequencies have more bandwidth but are much easier to block with any walls or moisture. You can overcome that with more power in some cases. But more power means more interference wit other similar devices. Satellites, especially smaller ones like Starlink are limited on solar panels & power.
 
   / Starlink #3,916  
It's not so much the tech but the frequency & power levels. Higher frequencies have more bandwidth but are much easier to block with any walls or moisture. You can overcome that with more power in some cases. But more power means more interference wit other similar devices. Satellites, especially smaller ones like Starlink are limited on solar panels & power.
Yes, frequency is everything for signal loss, but the specific frequency in question does matter, not just higher is worse. Yes, power does also matter, but if you are trying stuff power into a major water absorption band, it doesn't matter how much power you have.

In practice it takes much higher rainfall rates to slow/stop Starlink compared to other satellite systems. Remember that the Starlink satellites pass overhead quickly so your system is scanning the whole sky pretty rapidly, which makes the impact of any given storm cell lower, because Starlink continously monitors signal power, it switches to satellites not behind / above the cell automatically. That makes for better signal automatically.

To me the actual service is the real bottom line. If you aren't at the coasts, it looks like 1"/hr or more seems to be where people start to have issues. That is a more than a fair amount of rain. Of course, thunderstorms overhead can have a lot of stored water, so it is not an absolute rule.

All the best,

Peter
 
   / Starlink #3,917  
I'd have to say that Starlink has been more reliable than pretty much any ISP I've ever had, and I've been around a long time. Other than a couple full system outages that everyone has experienced and maybe 3 times in 2.5 years where heavy rain or snow faded the signal it just works. I'm in IT and WFH. I'm online via VPN to my company all the time. In fact, usuall the VPN stays connected for as many days as it takes for their side to boot me off for hitting max online time (10 days?). My wife also is WFH. I'm on Teams/WebEx/Zoom meetings at least 50% of the day with no video, sharing or audio issues.

Your mileage will vary if you have any obstructions to your dish. But if you have a spot where the dish is unobstructed you should have very reliable Internet service.
That is good to know, big blue, because I cannot have my lectures interrupted in the middle of them.

The starlink would actually be a back up to a local service provider here on the lake. Other that, all we have is Bell and Xplornet. And I had to cut the bell line because I’m using their conduit to put 200 amp service into it coming to my cottage. I don’t need the bell for phone service for sure, but I had it as a Wi-Fi back up.
 
   / Starlink #3,918  
Having Starlink for a year now, we have experienced 2 rain outages of around 5 minutes each. We also had the global outage that everyone else seemed to have. That lasted a little over 30 minutes. The service has surprised me at how robust it is. I think my previous Wi-Fi service was down more than it was up.
 
   / Starlink #3,919  
Well I seem to have had a bit different experience then many other posters. My antenna is 100% unobstructed but many rainstorms/thunder storms do effect the service adversely. During storms I often get outages of 2 to 10 minutes. Mild rain showers do not bother but heavier storms most certainly do. I've also had outages when there was no storm here but other areas may have had them at times, I'm not positive. The service is good most of the time, I do not see the huge speeds that some claim to get but everything works good. Including streaming videos and multiple TV's at the same time.
It is better then the point to point wireless I previously had speed wise and reliability is a toss up.
All in all I'm pleased with the service and have no plan to change, during outages many times I can stream using my phone as a hotspot for a connection it certainly is not near as fast but does work most of the time.
 
   / Starlink #3,920  
I have the same experience as Lou. I have lost signal with heavy cloud cover. But for the most part it has been much more reliable than what I have had in the past! I am very happy with the service even with the peak time slow downs in my area.
 

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