slow speed today

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Mine is dataone Home-500 plan & using wifi type II modem. access internet only thru wifi on my notebook. SNR Margin : 23.7db & 6db Line Attenuation : 29.0db & 22.3db Data Rate: 2048kbps & 328kbbs what is your opinion for above readings? reagrds
 
i have collected some information about various line parameters & it seems that your SNR Margin should be as high as possible & should be >10.Line attn should be as low as possible.
basically SNR is signal to noise ratio the more your SNR is more the signal strength is.Line attn is a factor which depends upon how far are you from local exchange the farther you are more will be the Line attn & lesser will be the speeds.

Line Attenuation.
Line attention is in relation to the \"loop loss\" on your line.
The further you are away from the exchange the higher your attenuation figure will be as the signal loss increases.
The lower your attenuation figure the more chance you have of getting the faster speeds.

SNR (Signal to Noise Ratio).
The SNR margin can only be measured from your own property and therefore to be measured correctly may need an engineer visit to check this figure from the BT test socket behind your master phone socket. Your SNR Margin can fluctuate on a day to day basis and may vary depending upon local equipment, conditions and interference.
An upgrade in speed often causes the SNR to decrease by up to 5 dB. The higher your SNR figure then the better your line quality and therefore a higher chance of getting faster speeds.
It is very important to note that SNR plays much more importance in maxdsl than it did on the traditional adsl product.

The SNR Margin is not the same as the Signal to Noise Ratio (SNR), although it is related.
The SNR is the signal-to-noise ratio. It is the ratio between the strength of the signal and the background noise on the line and is universally expressed as a logarithmic ratio (decibels or dB).
For a given line the SNR remains essentially fixed whatever the speed you are running.
ADSL routers and modems actually report the SNR Margin, and the term used to describe this varies but is generally “SNR Margin”, “Noise Margin”, “Margin”, “Receive Margin”.
The SNR Margin is the difference between the actual SNR and the SNR required to run at a given speed.
For example, if you need 20dB of SNR to run at 512Kbps, and the actual line SNR is 45dB, then the SNR Margin is 25dB.

The main reason why SNR margins fall as the line speed increases is that the required SNR increases.
For example, if increasing the speed from 512Kbps to 2MBps raises the required SNR from 20db to 30dB then the margin left will fall from 25dB to 15dB (as 45dB-30dB = 15dB.)
The one refinement is that if it is necessary for a faster speed to use some higher frequencies then these will have inherently lower SNRs and that will also contribute to the reduced SNR margin somewhat.
The SNR Margin is there to absorb fluctuations in interference on the line, and therefore to keep the service reliable. The figure of 6dB is normally accepted as enough headroom to make the link reliable, but some lines need more - 10dB is often accepted as a safer target.
Note that the target figures in the list are a reasonable summary, but it is the \"SNR Margin\" that is being talked about, not the \"SNR\". Despite this, it also does not invalidate the point that the most important factor on the reliability of a line at a given speed is the SNR Margin.
Also, as neither the SNR or SNR Margin can be established until a line is enabled (or validated with special test gear), then the estimated attenuation has to be used to come up with a viable speed. Once a line is enabled and working, it is possible - at least in theory - to gather information about the actual SNR and SNR Margin and use that to work out the actual speed the line will be able to sustain. This is essentially what will happen with the MaxDSL launch towards the end of the year.


Example figures:-

On 2Mb (SAR 110)
Local Line Atten.: 21.5 dB
Remote Line Atten.: 7.0 dB
Local SNR Margin: 31.0 dB
Remote SNR Margin: 26.0 dB
 
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