

- PINGPLOTTER TORRENT INSTALL
- PINGPLOTTER TORRENT DRIVER
- PINGPLOTTER TORRENT DOWNLOAD
- PINGPLOTTER TORRENT WINDOWS
These can be visualized in the PingPlotter graphs as red blocks or spikes and steep spikes in the latency.įinally, please click "file" (in the upper left hand of you screen), then "export sample set > all data."Īlso do a save as image, make sure the save as type for the image is PNG.PingPlotter - одна из лучших утилит под Windows для диагностики IP-сетей. Problems can be spotted by periods with lots of packet loss or high latency. Please allow Pingplotter to run for at least 15 minutes, while you experience network problems.


PINGPLOTTER TORRENT DOWNLOAD
You can get download it from the following link: Also turn off all other computers in your local network.
PINGPLOTTER TORRENT INSTALL
You might need to install a ping analyser so that we see a more detailed report My router and modem are separate devices, but I've never had an issue with the modem before.īefore you ask, no I cannot test with an ethernet connection, hence why I'm using a range extender. I'm currently using a 5Ghz connection with a WiFi range extender, along with a cable internet connection. Here are my more specific networking hardware specs:
PINGPLOTTER TORRENT DRIVER
I've installed the most recent WiFi driver directly from Intel's site, didn't work.My best guess is that it's something to do with the upload causing high latency, but it appears to only be Overwatch that's affected, nothing else. The latency doesn't spike nearly as often when watching a video as when playing Overwatch. The part of the graph after the green highlight is just me browsing the web, and when the bytes in (download) goes up is when I start watching a Youtube video. This stops immediately after I close the game. Notice how the upload rate (bytes out) is fairly constant but has several spikes that roughly correlate with the computer-to-router latency. The following graph shows the latency problem (highlighted green is where I'm playing Overwatch, x-axis is time since I started monitoring in seconds) I narrowed it down to significant latency spikes to my router, but this is only happening when I play Overwatch. So I recently starting having an issue where everyone in Overwatch would stop moving for half a second, and then rubberband to where they should be.

Please let me know if this isn't the correct site to post this question.
