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回報翻譯問題
When you go to your router settings in your internet browser (Commonly: 192.168.0.1)
Find port forwarding and enter like Seraphna said,
UDP:
80, 443, 55296-55551
TCP:
80, 443, 55296-55551
Make sure to put in your local IP address so it knows where to go. The router should give you a dropdown of local IPs, but if it doesn't, you can do this:
Right-click "start" on your taskbar and "run". Enter "cmd". Enter "ipconfig". Your IPv4 Address is your local address.
Don't forget to check mark it too. Sometimes people miss that.
After I saved the configuration it seemed to work and my speed jumped to 6 MB/s. But then it dwindled to 0.01 MB/s. You still have to restart your router in order for it to work. Why everytime I saved the config without restarting would result in a momentary boost in DL speed is beyond me, but you still need to restart the router.
Now even after this, it still seemed to cause me an issue until I right-click the FF 14 icon and "Run as Administrator". I'm now at a steady 4.5 MB/s. Obviously it'll be different depending on your ISP speed. Even after typing all this, my speed has been maintained.
I hope this helps should someone come searching for an answer.
Some router models also perform an automatic restart whenever you change the port forwarding settings.
I guess it primarily depends on what type of router you're using too, ISP-provided ones tend to be more strict about which settings will be applied without a restart in order to help prevent inexperienced users "breaking" them.......(yes, really)
While it doesn't, a reboot often causes Windows to do things like drop it's current DNS Cache and other temporary settings that can effect your download speed even after fixing it at the router level.
Those must be the cheapy models then honestly... All the ones I've had never did that :|
Changing your DNS often doesn't have much of a bearing on speeds so flushing your cache would barely put a dent. Rarely does a router reboot cause a speed drop from the Windows side and it would not explain a 5.99 MB drop.
Rebooting a router, depending on the model, would only increase speed (ignoring the port forwadring bit) if it doesn't clear old connetions and it gets bogged down. My old WRT54G had this where torrenting for 2-3 days would kill my connection until a hard reboot.
And that flushing the cache doesn't touch speed. It affects redirects and not being able to connect, which is another issue entirely. It isn't "persumed", it is how DNS works.
You need to optimize your router for torrent based downloads. Your internet speed will never make up for a router that can’t make good port handshakes.