R
Robert Baer
Guest
Martin Brown wrote:
45Kby line.
per quarter mile).
Is that what you were looking for?Robert Baer wrote:
Martin Brown wrote:
Robert Baer wrote:
Martin Brown wrote:
Robert Baer wrote:
a7yvm109gf5d1@netzero.com wrote:
On Apr 4, 9:46 pm, Robert Baer <robertb...@localnet.com> wrote:
Trying to download something larger than 2Meg; used to be
possible
but recently not.
Observtions: short 100-300mSec burst or bursts incoming
followed by
1-20sec no data transfer; repeats until line drops out for no
apparent
reason.
Solutions other than unobtainable high speed connection?
Can you query the modem for line quality? It might tell you
something.
Good question; what are the Hayes protocol commands for that?
RTFM. Look at the FAQs for the modem groups.
The delay is caused by your modem spitting out bytes of
compressible material at your computer faster than the computer can
cope. The overrun generates a cascade failure whereby data is lost,
the ISP backs off and retries exponentially until you drop the
connection. Line noise can make the situation even worse if speed
renegotiation occurs as well.
Without the &V1 diagnostics it is a stab in the dark. And even with
them it is necessary to know the chipset and revision level. Ask in
the modem groups - there must be some other poor souls there still
on dialup.
Regards,
Martin Brown
It is only recently that i have has this problem and i have
changed nothing.
My COM1 port is configured to 115Kbaud.
Good heavens and old style COM1 port at 115k and an external modem.
That *can* be maxed out with a decent V.90 connection and some types
of web HTML (or certain types of text file). Internal modems have
better buffering and these days are very cheap standard items.
What RS232 chipset, what buffering enabled and what driver?
Both facts argue that the problem is not due to "modem spitting
out bytes of compressible material at your computer faster than the
computer can cope".
It could also be a retrain problem. But you would be much better off
asking these questions in a US modem group.
Regards,
Martin Brown
chipset?? it is part of an ASIC on the motherboard (by ASUS).
Driver is most recent from US Robotics.
I am trying to establish just how prehistoric your setup is. You appear
determined not to provide enough information to make diagnosis easy.
** OK; then the "chipset" is courtesy of ASUS M2N-MX SE PLUS motherboard.
times i saw up to 80Kby rates for extended periods of time - over aBUT...
*All* of it worked for years until recently (went bad around April 1).
There is a possibility that you have a virus that is saturating your
limited bandwidth connection. Do you have current AV and fully patched
OS? Also possible your ISP finally worked out how to enable compression.
* Before these *recent* problems, my modem has done compression so at
45Kby line.
....or "blue box" (aka two copper pair to anywhere you can afford at $$$You could always move to ISDN if you are stuck on dialup for the
forseeable future. That gives you 64k per line (128k bonded) of raw data
and more with compression - a worthwhile improvement over any 56k modem.
* well, if i was rich enough, i could use a T-1 line...
per quarter mile).
One thing you could try is disabling fall forward on the modem to see if
it is a line noise related speed negotiation problem or alternatively
force a connection at a more conservative data rate. Not sure how much
tweaking of the modem S registers is allowed in the US region.
* No restrictions on S registers.
So, it seems localnet.com has problems on their end...Regards,
Martin Brown
BTW, a different ISP solved the problems.