The 2.4GHz band is the older of the two wireless bands that are in use today. On this band, we find 802.11b/g/n wireless standards with up to 600Mbps bandwidth on offer when using wireless-n compliant devices. Due to the lower operating frequency, 2.4GHz signals offer a wider level of coverage, but the lower throughput speeds are a disadvantage to this ageing band.
To test the maximum throughput a connection can handle, a fixed block size of 16384 Bytes is sent from the client to the server over a period of five minutes. The higher block size will allow the transfer rate to stay as high as possible – in the same way that large files transfer from one drive to another quicker than lots of small files of the same total size.
TCP Performance
UDP Performance
In a real world situation, the blocks of data that pass through a wireless adaptor are not of the same size each time, so to give a more realistic impression of how an adaptor performs, the adapter is once again tested at each range for five minutes. This time, however, the block size will vary from 32 Bytes up to 16384 Bytes in increasing steps of 148.7 Bytes each time.
TCP Performance
UDP Performance
The CYCLEDESK 100 is not just an ordinary gaming desk, it is designed for a…
The NZXT Lift 2 is an symmetrical mouse that goes the distance. Its lightweight design…
The MAG B650 TOMAHAWK WIFI is a gaming oriented ATX motherboard constructed around the latest…
Experience incredible performance, visuals, and efficiency when gaming and streaming with the AMD Radeon™ RX…
Welcome to the new era of performance. AMD Ryzen 7000 Series ushers in the speed…
Take a step into the future with the Z790 Gaming Plus Wifi motherboard, designed and…