Zennon Posted October 5, 2015 Share Posted October 5, 2015 How Ze? I sometimes see those fast moving players. I think it is the game rewinding time for you so they speed forward. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
A7Legit Posted October 5, 2015 Share Posted October 5, 2015 Jitter = lag compensation spazzing out. The more you have, the crazier it is in game. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Toy Posted October 6, 2015 Author Share Posted October 6, 2015 On your Ipv6 question. Xbox one uses Ipv6 for P2P games using terredo. https://www.nanog.org/sites/default/files/wed.general.palmer.xbox_.47.pdf I have had the rewind feeling where the other players speed up and move forward in time quick and you stay in your time like normal, it happens in burst's I have not had this to often but it happens. Are you moving quicker or the other players if it is them you are being rewound in time by the game if this is happening all the time then that sucks. An open NAT is an open NAT like you say but I would try the ports just incase. Give your One a static ip and forward the ports in the Netduma and point the ports to the IP you gave the One, It is very easy to do that on the Netduma. yeah again i've tried two different connections at this new apartment i just rented... and both of them are having the issues... except on comcast its worse... its constant with the fast forwarding enemies.. on the other hand atnt uverse feels a little more stable but has the same problem just a little less.. and i don't get it.. with uverse the highest speeds i could get were 45down and 5 up i did the diagnostics on the netduma for both connections and on atnt the ping says good jitter exceptional spikes exceptional and packet loss- no loss... on the comcast it says exceptional for all and no loss these are the pings for atnt min/avg/max is 22.4/22.7/23.098ms and on comcast it's all at 10ms ping i have lower jitter on comcast too but for some reason i skip randomly and am always experiencing this fast forward phenomenon i've never felt before... i've tried optimizing my mtu and didn't help i've tried going direclty through the modem for both connections and it didn't help... i've tried different coax jacks for the comcast modem and it didn't help... i tried plugging everything into the wall jack instead of surge protector and it didn't help... i had a tech come out for comcast and he said my signals are great and theres no noise... i have great jitter ping and speeds... and i just don't get why im lagging on both internets... is this apartment just cursed or something? thanks in advance toy Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Zennon Posted October 6, 2015 Share Posted October 6, 2015 Have you ran pingplotter over an extended period ? https://www.pingplotter.com/ Type 8.8.8.8 into the target IP and press the green go button, you may leave it running as long as you want. Use the pro version free for 30 days. It might show what is going on a bit better. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
secretface Posted October 6, 2015 Share Posted October 6, 2015 I have had nothing but problems with comcast, they are coming for the billionth time today, only because I email the ceo. I have tried 4 routers, many modems, gaming monitor, cat6 instead of cat5e, got an additional xbone to rule that out. Either my profile is marked for death or comcast has some issue they aren't telling us about. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Toy Posted October 6, 2015 Author Share Posted October 6, 2015 I have had nothing but problems with comcast, they are coming for the billionth time today, only because I email the ceo. I have tried 4 routers, many modems, gaming monitor, cat6 instead of cat5e, got an additional xbone to rule that out. Either my profile is marked for death or comcast has some issue they aren't telling us about. yeah i agree i've tried everything you've tried and seriously no luck... i dont understand this... everything im seeing should mean i have great internet i have virtually no jitter sometimes 1ms never higher and less than 10ms ping almost every test i do.. with 0% packet loss and now with the tech coming out he confirmed i have no noise on my line and lowered my db via a 9db tap splitter so now my levels are in a good range i guess i've tried 2 different coax jacks through the direct coax line ruling out splitters and taps and with all that done it's still in like overdrive where everyone is constantly moving at the speed of light... i'm always on a 4bar but feel like it's lagging it's so weird i've played xbox since it first came out and have had atleast 6 different isps... and have never experienced this phenomenon.... and is really bugging me cause i'm literally trying everything that i possibly can i recently tried the mtu optimizer and opening all ports needed and still nothing has changed... i think this is a lost cause guys but if anyone has anything else to try im willing to do so thanks for your time i really do appreciate it toy Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Zennon Posted October 6, 2015 Share Posted October 6, 2015 Might seem off the cuff but this could cause issues .....how are comcast in the whole spying debarcle , do they run all traffic through an NSA / GCHQ server? like snowden spoke of Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
imts_maul Posted October 6, 2015 Share Posted October 6, 2015 Tap levels should be between 15 and 18db.. no more than a 2db loss from tap to home.. 4port d-mark/splitter should be intalled at that point causing an instant 7db loss and then the loss on the coax line itself, depending on length.. but signal at the modem should be between 7 and -7db with no more than 1 splitter in-line.. you keep saying apartment and I think that's your problem right there.. more than likely a neighbor has a bad line, split line, bad fitting, a tv throwing noise back in the system and since the whole apartment unit is running off the same LC. It's causing issues with your system... be my first thoughts.... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CableGames22 Posted October 7, 2015 Share Posted October 7, 2015 Try your isp you might have a latency problem caused by contention from an oversold node area group.. Your tap levels for modems should be anywhere between +10 to -10. You need to get ahold of an osp tech outside plant tech and ask him is there any ingress getting into their plant causing issues or is it contention from to many subscribers on one node using up all the available upstream bandwidth Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Toy Posted October 7, 2015 Author Share Posted October 7, 2015 Tap levels should be between 15 and 18db.. no more than a 2db loss from tap to home.. 4port d-mark/splitter should be intalled at that point causing an instant 7db loss and then the loss on the coax line itself, depending on length.. but signal at the modem should be between 7 and -7db with no more than 1 splitter in-line.. you keep saying apartment and I think that's your problem right there.. more than likely a neighbor has a bad line, split line, bad fitting, a tv throwing noise back in the system and since the whole apartment unit is running off the same LC. It's causing issues with your system... be my first thoughts.... thanks for the input before the tech came i tested my modem directly at the amp and the highest db in the downstream channel was +18 and lows were around +15 16ish and along the main line back in the apartment it would be around +13ishdb highs and 8.5db lows the tech came out and put a 9 db tap splitter to get the power levels down... im not very tech savvy but when the tech came out he said i have perfect noise on the line under 10ms ping times which is fantastic 0-1ms of jitter and no packet loss so he was like theres nothing further i can do for you.... he also mentioned that what i thought was the tap was an amp on the side of the apartment and said theres another one in the front of the apartment so im guessing i go through two amps? i switched to atnt uverse and am having the same issue but it's not as bad as the comcast issues and on atnt i have higher pings more jitter and stuff so to me it doesn't make any sense lol unless im going crazy or something Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Toy Posted October 7, 2015 Author Share Posted October 7, 2015 Have you ran pingplotter over an extended period ? https://www.pingplotter.com/ Type 8.8.8.8 into the target IP and press the green go button, you may leave it running as long as you want. Use the pro version free for 30 days. It might show what is going on a bit better. where can i get this on mac? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PharmDawgg Posted October 7, 2015 Share Posted October 7, 2015 where can i get this on mac?If you go to Pingplotter's website I believe there is one for the Mac in development but it is not out yet. Double check me. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Marvin Posted October 7, 2015 Share Posted October 7, 2015 Had the same issue, was too close and the signal too "hot". I would recommend to all, get an "active" (not passive) amp for your cable connection. It will address the issue of your signal being too low OR high. This way your modem does not have to work overtime, the amp resolves the signal issue and no undo pressure is place on the modem. This has resolve "all" issues for me at three different locations, all different installs and lengths to the "post". Hopefully this will help others as it has me. http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00122FCRG Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Alex49H Posted October 7, 2015 Share Posted October 7, 2015 Had the same issue, was too close and the signal too "hot". I would recommend to all, get an "active" (not passive) amp for your cable connection. It will address the issue of your signal being too low OR high. This way your modem does not have to work overtime, the amp resolves the signal issue and no undo pressure is place on the modem. This has resolve "all" issues for me at three different locations, all different installs and lengths to the "post". Hopefully this will help others as it has me. http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00122FCRG Where do you install the amp? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CableGames22 Posted October 8, 2015 Share Posted October 8, 2015 Had the same issue, was too close and the signal too "hot". I would recommend to all, get an "active" (not passive) amp for your cable connection. It will address the issue of your signal being too low OR high. This way your modem does not have to work overtime, the amp resolves the signal issue and no undo pressure is place on the modem. This has resolve "all" issues for me at three different locations, all different installs and lengths to the "post". Hopefully this will help others as it has me. http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00122FCRG That is not going to solve his issue by getting an active amp?? active means it is powered and it amplifies the signal on the downstream..There are no active upstream/return subscriber amps for the home anywhere in the world because modems have dynamic modulation, meaning they can raise and lower their output/transmit/upstream level up from 0 to 58db transmit depending what the cable isp cmts is telling the modem to talk back at or transmit back from the customers home going upstream to the isp's Headend into their cmts. Dude he has a LATENCY problem he should ask for an outside plant tech to go out check for INGRESS into the plant/network and work with their headend techs to check for upstream and downstream contention problems and or errors. Alot of cable isp's in america are oversold on bandwidth and need to upgrade their UBR/CMTS.. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CableGames22 Posted October 8, 2015 Share Posted October 8, 2015 Toy try this.. Play with some of your buddies that you know has the same internet company as you in the same state and play some private matches with them...Try this to see if you still get those lag WTF moments..If you do its your cable provider that has internal network issues if you don't it's a problem outside of you cable providers network and not much you can do... Good luck Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Marvin Posted October 9, 2015 Share Posted October 9, 2015 Where do you install the amp? Before the modem. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Marvin Posted October 9, 2015 Share Posted October 9, 2015 That is not going to solve his issue by getting an active amp?? active means it is powered and it amplifies the signal on the downstream..There are no active upstream/return subscriber amps for the home anywhere in the world because modems have dynamic modulation, meaning they can raise and lower their output/transmit/upstream level up from 0 to 58db transmit depending what the cable isp cmts is telling the modem to talk back at or transmit back from the customers home going upstream to the isp's Headend into their cmts. Dude he has a LATENCY problem he should ask for an outside plant tech to go out check for INGRESS into the plant/network and work with their headend techs to check for upstream and downstream contention problems and or errors. Alot of cable isp's in america are oversold on bandwidth and need to upgrade their UBR/CMTS.. Take the advice or not, one's prerogative, not here to argue it. Your "oversold bandwidth" statement, agree with 100%. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CableGames22 Posted October 14, 2015 Share Posted October 14, 2015 Take the advice or not, one's prerogative, not here to argue it. Your "oversold bandwidth" statement, agree with 100%. Your 100% correct.. latency within a network is his problem but whats causing it is what he needs to investigate.. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Toy Posted October 16, 2015 Author Share Posted October 16, 2015 Thanks Mod Box! *respect* Hi Toy - Mod Box actually nailed it. I don't know of a system that would spec +18dB at the back of the set or modem. Those are just LOONY TUNES SILLY levels that would quickly compound with a litany of issues with FCC testing, but I won't go into here. Couple of quick questions. Is this a multiple dwelling unit, like an apartment building? One standing structure with several "units"? or is this a single residence like a house or half of a duplex? This will help with a couple of quick thoughts and then we can work on getting Comcast out there, because you will need them to fix what is wrong, but we can work on it. Everything Mod Box said about the terminator cap is correct. Any open ports will only compound your issues, of which is sounds like you have a couple of them going. But, I happen to be a HUGE Black Ops 2 guy, I play all the time, and I have a host of settings for you to try once we get you up and running correctly. nevermind i found out how to bypass the suggestion im gonna try throttling my connection a lot more when i play so i can see if it fixes the lag compensation Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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