Oof, that jitter is bad and maybe a reason why you are disconnecting or having bad streams. If all physical connections are okay (if using HFC/cable modem, check all the screw terminals are tight).This is my recent speed test for when it was dropping
Yea Pommster, maybe u know in simple words how he can do what you just wrote above?This is sounds a bit complicatedOof, that jitter is bad and maybe a reason why you are disconnecting or having bad streams. If all physical connections are okay (if using HFC/cable modem, check all the screw terminals are tight).
One option that MAY help, if it's a common occurrence that your jitter is so high, may be to do throttle your upstream down by 1 or 2Mbps if your router supports upstream QOS adjustments. The reasoning here is that there may be an external limiter to limit the "burstiness" of connections that could be just dropping packets. Throttling the upload yourself will prevent the burstiness, and hence the limiter dropping packets, and a lower jitter.
This is just conjecture and at best, a guess as to what is happening. It is just my experience of Australian internet connections and how upstream traffic bursting over 50Mbps is treated on residential connections, and how manually throttling my upstream to 48Mbps has improved upstream jitter.
He said maybe you are using too much upload bandwidth, check if router has settings to limit/prioritize upload bandwidth.Yea Pommster, maybe u know in simple words how he can do what you just wrote above?This is sounds a bit complicated
It's difficult not knowing what equipment he has and not all consumer routers can limit upload... It's usually QOS (Quality of Service) if it's there. If it's one of the newer mesh systems like Google WiFi or Eero, then it'd be very easy.Yea Pommster, maybe u know in simple words how he can do what you just wrote above?This is sounds a bit complicated
This. Limiting upload to a bit below what nominal upload is can help. Play around with it. Stream is unlikely to require double figures in upstream (if nothing else going on on the network).He said maybe you are using too much upload bandwidth, check if router has settings to limit/prioritize upload bandwidth.
(Speed test tests jitter before upload speed test so for upload speed to be the issue someone would have to be using the upload bandwidth at the time.....well unless he himself has set the obs bitrate ridiculously high)
my cable modem does not have away to do that I am using my internet providers modem .
*scratches head* Only download is dropping?It's only the down load speed dropping and the download jitter is hight like
Just trying to think of what could be suddenly bringing your download to zero. You need both for a stream as there are packets going in both directions. If that happens a lot, I'd suspect the modem/router being faulty? Do you ever get dropouts when watching something like YouTube or Netflix? Though if you get a momentary outage, those may not show a drop due to buffering.ya the downloads drops to zero the upload is always good but the last speed that I posted all was god but the jitter was high like it showed in the previous that showed the speed test and when I asked about the download speed drooping.
Reply #75 you said this:ya the downloads drops to zero the upload is always good but the last speed that I posted all was god but the jitter was high like it showed in the previous that showed the speed test and when I asked about the download speed drooping.
So you have cable modem & router. Usually most bypass cable modem (bridge mode etc) & use router for all wired/wireless connections. Otherwise they just use cable modem & its wireless if it offers that also.I only have wireless stuff on a Asus router and sometimes that loose connection. My computer is hooked up right to the cable mode.
sorry i might to say downloadReply #75 you said this:
"I do have people sharing my internet but they are not doing much to have it drop to 0 on upload"
and Reply #77 this:
"this is what I don't under stand when I broadcast and my upload speed goes to 0 i can do a ping and it comes back as nothing was lost ?"
So I'm confused....... upload, or download dropping to zero?
Bandwidth looks fine. I see that your frame rate drops a couple of times. Can't really say what is happening there. Maybe try to get output resolution to a standard widescreen resolution (720p is 1280x720, 1080p is 1920x1080) and use the NVEnc encoder if you have nVidia video card.ok here is my speed test when it drops
i had both bitrate and FPS drop at same timeBandwidth looks fine. I see that your frame rate drops a couple of times. Can't really say what is happening there. Maybe try to get output resolution to a standard widescreen resolution (720p is 1280x720, 1080p is 1920x1080) and use the NVEnc encoder if you have nVidia video card.
i had both bitrate and FPS drop at same time