Always found this to be the most accurate

http://evnrte.com/

 

 

From: Discuss <discuss-bounces+joe=polcari....@lists.blu.org> on behalf of 
Matthew Gillen <m...@mattgillen.net>
Date: Tuesday, July 21, 2020 at 11:21 AM
To: <disc...@driftwood.blu.org>
Subject: Re: [Discuss] OT - Increased WiFi Speeds After DNS Change

 

 

 

On 7/18/2020 6:27 PM, Dan Ritter wrote:

e...@null.net wrote: 

I decided to try out Cloudflare's DNS service (1.1.1.1). As the Comcast gateway 
will not let the user change the DNS settings in it, I plugged a router into 
the gateway and input Cloudflare's addresses into it. For added measure, I also 
set the WiFi connection from the Android to the router to use a static IP 
address and also manually input the same DNS' for the connection. In using the 
router, I am losing IPv6. The router supports it, but I was not able to 
establish a successful IPv6 connection with it.

 

The speeds via an Ethernet connection from the router did not change using 
1.1.1.1, although I noticed a 10% increase in both download and upload speeds 
via WiFi, using both Ookla's Speedtest app and the speedof.me web site. Prior 
to this - connecting directly through the Comcast gateway but also using 
Comcast's DNS' through the router, the phone displayed download speeds of 
50Mbps and upload speeds of 11Mbps. Using 1.1.1.1 via WiFi, I am now seeing 
download speeds approaching 56Mbps and upload speeds approaching 13Mbps, via 
the same app and web site. This is all via 2.4GHz.

 

It is possible that just by changing the DNS service, it resulted in this 
increase in WiFi speeds?

 

No. You changed the Comcast hardware out for some other

hardware. A 10% change is well within normal parameters.

 

Typically a speedtest would only do one (or a few) DNS lookup(s) at the

beginning of the test.  So any change in latency for that part would be

completely drowned out by the test of the test.

 

Also, I wouldn't necessarily trust speeedtest anymore.  They are owned

by comcast.  Fast.com uses netflix's same cloud infrastructure, so if

you want to know what throttling your ISP might actually be putting in

place, that is probably more reliable.

 

Thanks,

Matt

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