 | Have to update my results post, I wasn't pinging my Internet Gateway. Here are the updated results after the switch to Ethernet from MoCA:
Verizon switched it!
Here is that ping difference to the first hop upstream router (note that the gateway IP changed):
Before the switch (from the OP):
C:\Users\username>ping 108.49.145.1 -t
Pinging 108.49.145.1 with 32 bytes of data: Reply from 108.49.145.1: bytes=32 time=7ms TTL=125 Reply from 108.49.145.1: bytes=32 time=12ms TTL=125 Reply from 108.49.145.1: bytes=32 time=9ms TTL=125 Reply from 108.49.145.1: bytes=32 time=7ms TTL=125 Reply from 108.49.145.1: bytes=32 time=9ms TTL=125 Reply from 108.49.145.1: bytes=32 time=9ms TTL=125 Reply from 108.49.145.1: bytes=32 time=10ms TTL=125 Reply from 108.49.145.1: bytes=32 time=7ms TTL=125
Ping statistics for 108.49.145.1: Packets: Sent = 8, Received = 8, Lost = 0 (0% loss), Approximate round trip times in milli-seconds: Minimum = 7ms, Maximum = 12ms, Average = 8ms
After the switch:
C:\Users\username>ping 108.20.201.1 -t
Pinging 108.20.201.1 with 32 bytes of data: Reply from 108.20.201.1: bytes=32 time=6ms TTL=125 Reply from 108.20.201.1: bytes=32 time=5ms TTL=125 Reply from 108.20.201.1: bytes=32 time=5ms TTL=125 Reply from 108.20.201.1: bytes=32 time=7ms TTL=125 Reply from 108.20.201.1: bytes=32 time=6ms TTL=125 Reply from 108.20.201.1: bytes=32 time=6ms TTL=125
Ping statistics for 108.20.201.1: Packets: Sent = 6, Received = 6, Lost = 0 (0% loss), Approximate round trip times in milli-seconds: Minimum = 5ms, Maximum = 7ms, Average = 5ms
Pretty interesting. So using the Coaxial (note you may need to if you have TV through FiOS) adds almost 2-5 ms to the ping! |