bruceb58
Supreme Mariner
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2006
- Messages
- 30,587
Re: satelite internet
If you don't believe me, how about another source:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Satellite_Internet_access
That 925ms ping the OP is getting sounds pretty good!

First of all, that's the distance if you are at the equator, 2nd of all, that's just the time to the satellite which then relays the info to the ip address that is getting pinged. The total one way latency, from the antenna, to the satellite, to a ground station and then to the receiver. Even if you use your 22K number(which is wrong unless you are at the equator), just the up and down from the satellite is 237mS. That doesn't even take into consideration any of the other latency in the system or atmospheric influences.Really, when you divide 22 by 186 what do you come up with? My calculator says 0.11xxx seconds. (Just over a tenth of a second.)
If you don't believe me, how about another source:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Satellite_Internet_access
For an internet packet, that delay is doubled before a reply is received. That is the theoretical minimum. Factoring in other normal delays from network sources gives a typical one-way connection latency of 500–700 ms from the user to the ISP, or about 1,000–1,400 ms latency for the total round-trip time (RTT) back to the user.
That 925ms ping the OP is getting sounds pretty good!
:facepalm::facepalm::facepalm: Maybe you should look again...it reports back the round trip latency. Maybe your definition of "RoundTrip Times" is different than mine!When you run a ping to calculate latency, you are only doing it one direction. If you doubt that go to a command prompt on your PC and type" Ping yourfavoritewebsite.com" and see what is reported back.
