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Sudden spike in ping while gaming... Need help!
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<blockquote data-quote="badwhitevision" data-source="post: 2522447" data-attributes="member: 127847"><p>To circumnavigate this issue, might I suggest leaving your LAN cable plugged in all day long. Make up some bullshit excuse about speed being slow for normal use otherwise. If cable length is the issue, indoor Cat 6 cables are cheap and you can easily get it terminated to a length of your desire.</p><p></p><p>If your router has a guest network, enable it. Then connect and check if the issue exists. If it does, it is not because of other devices connected to your Wi-Fi. If the ping spike doesn't occur, just set your guest network to hidden and connect only your device to it.</p><p></p><p>If your router doesn't support it, then change the Wi-Fi password by one character. (Do this when no one else is using the internet.) This prevents other devices from connecting to it. Supply the new Wi-Fi password onto your computer. This allows only your device to connect and hence you can confirm whether other devices are the reason for your ping spike.</p><p></p><p>If other devices are not the issue, then try as [USER=103321]@KAKAN[/USER] stated, changing the channels, most people don't bother with this, so any channel other than the default should be good.</p><p></p><p>[USER=121190]@variablevector[/USER] - Wouldn't that increase latency at all points?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="badwhitevision, post: 2522447, member: 127847"] To circumnavigate this issue, might I suggest leaving your LAN cable plugged in all day long. Make up some bullshit excuse about speed being slow for normal use otherwise. If cable length is the issue, indoor Cat 6 cables are cheap and you can easily get it terminated to a length of your desire. If your router has a guest network, enable it. Then connect and check if the issue exists. If it does, it is not because of other devices connected to your Wi-Fi. If the ping spike doesn't occur, just set your guest network to hidden and connect only your device to it. If your router doesn't support it, then change the Wi-Fi password by one character. (Do this when no one else is using the internet.) This prevents other devices from connecting to it. Supply the new Wi-Fi password onto your computer. This allows only your device to connect and hence you can confirm whether other devices are the reason for your ping spike. If other devices are not the issue, then try as [USER=103321]@KAKAN[/USER] stated, changing the channels, most people don't bother with this, so any channel other than the default should be good. [USER=121190]@variablevector[/USER] - Wouldn't that increase latency at all points? [/QUOTE]
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Sudden spike in ping while gaming... Need help!
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