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on 26-11-2025 07:37 PM
Good evening fellow TalkTalkers
I upgraded from fibre 150 to Fibre 900 this week and went live on the 24th, over the last couple of days, I’ve been monitoring download speeds at point of device.
All devices are at a similar distance to the router, a 2023 IPad was initially showing download speeds circa 745mbps but soon dropped and stayed around 345mbps, an older IPad Air 2 started circa 300mbps and is now averaging 150mbps which is what I was averaging on Fibre 150, similar speeds on a windows laptop, upload speeds on all devices is circa 100mbps.
Why the contrasting speeds on different devices, on 150 all were averaging 150 consistently ?
Anybody else experienced similar issues or slow speeds.
Many thanks
Saturday
Hi @dobbor11
No problem at all. I will be glad to help you, please @mention me in to your new thread.
Keith
I am not employed by TalkTalk, I'm just a customer. If my post has fixed the issue, please set Accept as Solution from the 3 dot menu.
TalkTalk support and Community Stars - Who are they?
Saturday
Sorry I do apologise.
Saturday
Hi @dobbor11
If you want help, you cannot use someone else's thread.
To get help, you must start your own thread. To create your own thread, go to the main page for the board in question & click the "Start a topic" button.
TalkTalk insists on one thread per problem per customer. Please note, TalkTalk makes the rules, not me.
Please also note the advice that I have given to @Steveowen1000.
Thanks.
Keith
I am not employed by TalkTalk, I'm just a customer. If my post has fixed the issue, please set Accept as Solution from the 3 dot menu.
TalkTalk support and Community Stars - Who are they?
on 27-11-2025 06:57 AM
Thank you so much for the support @KeithFrench
on 26-11-2025 09:38 PM
To answer this requires both a long & complex reply, so no apologies for this.
The Full Fibre 500 or 900 packages often mean that customers do not achieve the speeds they expect (obviously around 500 or 900Mbps). Firstly, you typically do not need the fastest speed possible on just one device, but rather enough speed to accomplish your tasks without compromising performance across all devices. As an example:-
However, I can help you achieve the fastest speeds possible on your devices. This is often not an issue with the design of these services, but rather the connection between these devices and the router. Your device must not be connected to the 2.4GHz Wi-Fi band; otherwise, it will never deliver such speeds. No other devices must be in use at the time of any speed tests, because Wi-Fi is a shared medium. This means that it works half-duplex (one direction at a time), device A transmits and receives its data separately. Then it is the turn of device B, followed by C, etc.
The Wi-Fi network adapters in these devices often cannot deliver speeds as fast as the fibre service can. Take the example of some older Wi-Fi 5 (802.11ac) adapters, which might work at speeds up to 433Mbps only if used in a perfect wireless environment, which most homes are not. When an internet speed test is performed, the speed achieved is down to the slowest link in the chain, namely the 433Mbps Wi-Fi adapter. Speed tests in this case might achieve somewhere around 400Mbps or less.
Older Ethernet connections can suffer as well. If a device only supports the 10/100Mbps standard, not 1000Mbps (1Gbps) or even the newer 2.5Gbps available on some desktop PCs, they are likely to only record 100Mbps on a speed test.
To get close to the 500/900Mbps on a speed test, that device must either have a minimum of a 1Gbps Ethernet connection or, if wireless, a faster Wi-Fi adapter. This would be a higher specification Wi-Fi 5 (802.11ac) or Wi-Fi 6 (802.11ax) adapter.
While Wi-Fi 6 is not designed to boost download speeds significantly, the new features will allow more connected devices. That said, faster speeds (up to 2.4Gbps) will be available if the environmental conditions in your property allow the use of a 160MHz channel bandwidth. Using 160MHz requires a very clean RF spectrum — a wide contiguous block without DFS radar activity or interference. To fully understand this requires detailed knowledge of channel allocation for it to work; otherwise, the router will fall back to an 80MHz channel bandwidth. Simply enabling 160MHz in the AP configuration is nowhere near enough. Currently, this means that it is very unlikely to work in the 5GHz Wi-Fi band, as all 160MHz channels cross into the DFS channel range (52 - 140); only the 6GHz band with Wi-Fi 6E or Wi-Fi 7 can be used.
I would not recommend using multiple eero 6 units on the FF500 or 900 services. TalkTalk, before supplying the Wi-Fi Hub 3 for these packages, used to provide the eero Pro 6 for them. One reason is that the eero Pro 6 is tri-band (1 x 2.4GHz and 2 x 5GHz Wi-Fi bands), allowing the backhaul network (connection between eeros) to maintain a faster speed. The eero 6 would therefore probably need an Ethernet-connected backhaul rather than using wireless, if it is required to use these slower, dual-band eeros. It may also not switch data fast enough for the increased speed of these packages.
There are some basic checks that you can do to ensure that your devices have the best chance of achieving these higher speeds:-
Keith
I am not employed by TalkTalk, I'm just a customer. If my post has fixed the issue, please set Accept as Solution from the 3 dot menu.
TalkTalk support and Community Stars - Who are they?
on 26-11-2025 08:50 PM
It's clearly a WiFi issue rather than an underlying speed issue. I will hand you over to my learned friend @KeithFrench.