Hi Michael,
It would be interesting to see from your logging whether the
quality of your wireless is reported as bad on sunny weekend days. This would
no-doubt help in determining whether it is a spectrum interference issue,
or a temperature related issue, as there is likely to be much less
interference on weekends due to businesses not using as much bandwidth.
While monitoring several links previously I have been able to
notice trends for time of day and weekday, relating to relative throughput and
ping time, nothing related to weather (other than snow) however.
10c (shiny new one),
Russell.
From: Michael
Davies [mailto:michael@hereisasite.co.nz]
Sent: Tuesday, 1 August 2006 3:48 p.m.
To: nznog@list.waikato.ac.nz
Subject: [nznog] Wireless link adversly affected by the sun?
Hi
there,
As
the subject suggests, I’ve been noticing an interesting problem with our
internet. We’re lucky enough to be on the receiving end of a wireless net
connection running through Trango broadband hardware, fairly conventional
wireless tech. However I’ve noticed through monitoring the connection with
smokeping to various places around the country that the connection quality
seems to decrease dramatically through the middle of the day, but not every
day. At first I thought that this was simply related to congestion somewhere,
but from following the weather a bit I’ve started noticing that it gets worse
on the nice sunny days.
For
example: Today, a balmy 17 degrees in Dunedin and beautifully sunny all day.
Packet loss and jitter begins to increase at about 9am and peaks about 1pm with
60% loss, then at 2pm as if flicking a switch it returns to nearly 0% loss.
>From looking at the graphs over time, this does happen quite often but not
every day and the loss today is definitely the worst I’ve seen it (but also the
warmest/sunniest day we’ve had in Dunedin for quite a while).
Has
anyone seen or heard of this happening before? Would there be any way to
prevent this – supposing that the sun is the culprit – short of installing a
Mr. Burns type sun shield?
Regards,
Michael