Connection Test Results Explained: What They Mean
1. Summary
A connection test measures network performance and reports metrics that explain link quality, speed, and reliability. Key results: latency, download speed, upload speed, packet loss, jitter, and throughput or ping.
2. Key metrics and what they indicate
-
Latency (ms): Time for a small packet to travel to the server and back.
- Low (≤30 ms): excellent for gaming/VoIP.
- 30–100 ms: acceptable for streaming and browsing.
-
100 ms: noticeable delay; affects interactive apps.
-
Download speed (Mbps): Rate at which data is received.
- High values: faster streaming, downloads, web browsing.
- If lower than your plan, check congestion, Wi‑Fi, or ISP issues.
-
Upload speed (Mbps): Rate at which data is sent (important for video calls, uploads, cloud backups).
- Low upload causes poor video quality and slow file uploads.
-
Packet loss (%): Percent of packets that fail to reach the destination.
- 0%–0.5%: normal.
-
1%: causes stuttering, dropped calls, retransmits; investigate hardware or routing.
-
Jitter (ms): Variation in packet arrival times.
- <20 ms: good for real‑time apps.
-
30–50 ms: will degrade call and game quality.
-
Throughput (Mbps): Actual sustained transfer rate during the test; reflects real usable bandwidth considering overhead and congestion.
3. Interpreting combined results (common scenarios)
- High download/upload, low latency/jitter/packet loss: optimal — likely no action needed.
- High latency but good speeds: routing or distant server — try a closer test server.
- Low speeds but low latency: local bandwidth congestion (many devices) or ISP throttling.
- Packet loss with varying jitter: likely faulty cable, Wi‑Fi interference, or unstable ISP link.
- Upload much lower than expected: common on asymmetric plans; check plan specs.
4. Quick troubleshooting steps
- Restart modem/router and test again.
- Test wired vs wireless to isolate Wi‑Fi issues.
- Close background apps using bandwidth.
- Try a different test server or run multiple tests at different times.
- Check cables and connectors for damage.
- Contact ISP if speeds remain below plan or packet loss persists.
5. When to escalate
- Persistent packet loss >1% or jitter >30 ms across wired tests.
- Speeds consistently below your subscribed plan after basic checks.
- Frequent disconnections or services unusable despite acceptable metrics.
6. Useful note
Some tests vary by server location, time of day, and test method — run several tests and compare results for a reliable picture.
Leave a Reply