I just wanted to say thank you. Whenever I feel down and depressed, I start watching your videos and within 5 minutes, I feel calm and my depression lifts from me. You're amazing and I tell all my friends all the great ways you've helped me over the last few years, and how watching your videos has kept me out of mental institutions. Thanks again, you are literally a lifesaver.
My router had a warning for the tv, no matter which port I used, saying to use a better cable that it was only getting 100mbs. I changed changed my cat6 cable thinking it was bad. I reset the tv after going through all my settings and nothing. I went through my router settings and disabled the priatization of streaming over everything else. I rebooted my router. Nothing. I found your video and I'm sold. Thank you sir.
Every time I'm watching your videos I feel like I'm in a classroom. Your information always on point and following your instructions makes everything safer. Thank you for sharing.
This man single handedly saved my online fps game experience. Before, I was suffering from 200+ avg ping, and I searched for answers everywhere. Nothing I tried fixed my ping. Until I found his fix for internet speed, which involved adjusting mtu size. Now I get lower than 60 avg ping, and I can go back to streaming valorant. Thank you so much!!!
if you look close, the ping on normal build-in ethernet is 4.1ms with the adaptor it´s 37.5ms so the direct build-in ethernet adaptor is better for gaming... And @Liron a normal tv cant really handle such a speed.. only high end tv´s with some decent chips
Your adapter is usb3, but the usb port on the tv is only usb 2, so you're limited to the speed of the usb 2.0 port (max 480mbps). So the gigabit adapter is a bit overkill. You want to find a tv that has usb 3 ports.
Thanks Liron! Saw this vid at the same time I was installing a new modem/router. The combination of connecting the smart TV to the LAN port (2.5G) and carefully placing the modem, and tidying up a few other things saw the speed jump from mid-120s down to a consistent 195mbps. Win!
@@Bumpa1962 A year down the track, I still get consistently higher speeds, nearly zero drop-outs and a better, more consistent signal for my devices. But since you say there's 0 diff... Hey, thanks for clearing that up for me
The thing to remember about Wi-Fi is that in your router the Wi-Fi radio is sitting on a single interface port. So imagine all of your wireless devices are sharing a single port inside the router, the more devices you have and the more they're doing the longer they're going to have to wait their turn to get data in and out. Sure when it's their turn to transmit it transmits fairly quickly but then the lag between it transmitting and then the router taking a moment to talk to all the other devices, then getting your data back and waiting for your device to grab a time slot, it can slow down the connection overall quite drastically. also in some cases it might be beneficial to just turn off beamforming if your router supports it. Sometimes as it tries to find a multipath solution to your device it screws up the math and you end up just pumping a bunch of interference. Also also, wired is always better than wireless. Period. End of story. If anyone has something to say against that, no you don't, you are wrong. If you can go wired always go wired! Always! wireless should be a last resort if you have a wired port on your device. Especially if you plan on streaming a lot of data constantly. And HD video is a lot of data! 4k is a ridonkoulous amount of data. 10 devices all streaming 4k clamoring for airtime? It's a packet traffic jam in the air man.... .... Actually hold on a tick, how can you run a tech channel and not know wired is always better? I mean knowing the intricacies of how Wi-Fi devices talk to each other that starts getting into the hard nerd territory, i grant it. But come on man, that's like tech 101 stuff..... Oh, also unless you are passing a lot of data at once, and you know you're connecting to servers that can support that level of throughput and bandwidth, paying extra for bandwidth you don't use from your ISP is just throwing money away. If you only ever hit say 300 megabits a second, don't throw away money on the gigabit link, you're never going to saturate it and every unused bit is wasted money. Also also also, just a little life pro tip for anyone who hasn't heard it, unless you're streaming your gameplay, video games only exchange small text packets of your characters position which direction they're looking which direction they're shooting whatever, video is magnitudes larger than multiplayer online gaming data streams.
You could be less of a snarky little twit about it. Nobody likes people who come off the way you do. Facts. You should read some Dale Carnegie. Life isn’t all about what you know… start with humility
Yes, thank you 🙋🏻♀️ Wired is even better for security reasons. I run an Ethernet adapter through the wall outlet and have my lappy connected to it in my room upstairs 😁 Thanks for your input 👍🏻🙋🏻♀️🌻
It's not the best option when the device only has a 100mbps ethernet port. All my devices with a 100mbps ethernet port, I use their wifi connection. Because I will typically get 300 mbps speeds or higher from those wifi devices. Connected to my wifi5 APs. And I also have a properly setup wifi network. Which means I have multiple APs ( currently 5) to make sure every device gets maximum signal strength, maximum speeds, and no congestion. But while I have over seventy devices on wifi at home. I also have close to seventy wired devices too. But I run a 10GbE backbone at home and run wired devices with either 10GbE, 5GbE, 2.5GbE, or 1GbE ports.
@ aaronwt . If you have over 70 devices on wifi at your home and they are all on at the same time . Then your home is the equivalent of living in a Microwave while it is turned on .
@@LironSegev this works great I'm almost 600..but sometimes it still lags what can be the reason...that speed is super fast I dont understand... unlimited Internet thru frontier
I ordered the one in your link. It was the "Amazon Basics Aluminum USB 3.0 Gigabit Ethernet Adapter". The one you referenced and showed in your video was the "Rankie USB Network Adapter, USB 3.0 to RJ45 Gigabit Ethernet Internet Adapter". Will either one of these work? Thanks
Thing to keep in mind is that most people probably won't need this, as most 4K video bandwidth from Internet streaming maxes out at around 25Mbps, which will barely put a dent in the TV's 100Mbps NIC. Now uncompressed UHD Blu Ray backups from your Plex server (128Mbps usually), that's a different story. You _will_ need this.
My router is on the 2nd floor and our HDTV is below on the 1st floor. I can't run an ethernet cable without making a mess of our walls and a subsequent divorce. The average download speed on the HDTV was ~ 75 with the Spectrum router. I bought an ASUS RT-AX3000 V2 Dual Band (and the price was reasonable!). The speed test showed over 300 MBPS download and 11 MBPS upload. As the router has 4 antennas, I can adjust each antenna individually to optimize the device's speed. A 32" HDTV in our basement is now receiving ~ 250 MBPS download speed now and it's 2 floors down from the router. This router is also supporting V6, so as the new devices include that in the future, it's ready for it. This is the best router I've ever had.
Thank you for that. It all helps. I have been amazed at how slow wifi is, and even more so if you are using VPN. My 300 mbps fibre was regularly showing speedtest results down around the 25 mbps. beware VPN overheads! And VPN + WIFI is even worse!!
Great tip. I thought I would try this on our LG TV. The TV wouldn't recognize the Gigabyte device on the USB ports. Now I need to do a little more research on how to get this done.
I just use 5Ghz, AX standard and I get ~300Mbps on my smart tv (wireless), without any third party devices. I live in Romania (Europe), and I have a 1Gbps subscription plan from my ISP (aprox. 10$/mounth - with the ONT and wifi router included).
Hi Liron, Thanks for the tip but was told that the smart TV cannot recognize this adapter as a networking device. Appreciate to know why you can but others comment no. Thanks
Thanks for the tip. I tried it on my LG tv and it could not find my connection. I couldn’t see the issue anywhere to address it. So I removed it. Ideas?
You realize the adapter is USB 3.0 but if the tv is a USB 2.0 your not getting faster speeds of usb 3.0, which are in themselves limited to about 480mb/s .. you are getting some speed increase No doubt.. but not as much as you would / could with more advanced options.. ( things like unsoldering the 100mp RJ45 jack. and replacing the NIC with a 1gb RJ45 jack.. ) .. same with USB 2.0 to USB 3.0..
Wow! I live in a rural area and all I have is the netgear hotspot for unlimited high speed internet. I have Netflix and watching movies is no fun because of the constant buffering. It would take 4 hours to watch an hour and a half movie. I never thought of hard wiring the netgear puck. I just connected the Ethernet cable to the TV and the puck and turned off the Wi-Fi. It worked! Oh my goodness! I can enjoy watching movies again. Why do I need the TV adapter? I wasn’t understanding that part. I’ve just ordered it from Amazon and if it makes it that much better I’m all in. Thank you!
@@RickMorrisey1303C what he's saying is that long wires aren't really a big deal. If you have a big house, you already have loads of cables. You (or a contractor) can simply reply n the cable and cleat it, feed it through, whatever). Or, run a cable to a computer if you don't use many other devices, especially if it's closer to the router. A video for millions can't be perfect for everyone mate.
Had month of internet outages - Nothing fixed the conection - even reinstalled Win10 Finally the Fixed got the provider on the mobile & reset modem its working! yap yap about all the old problems 1/2hr wasted this reset took10ms ( do this 1st) if its fooked :)
Great information. I have a question from someone that is technically challenged. Could you plug the ethernet cable that is connected to the USB3 adapter into a WiFi extender?
Well Liron where I live in Australia we still have a 4G network and my download is still only 50Mbs and there is nothing that I can do about it. As for hooking up an Ethernet cable well, that would be extraordinarily difficult for me as my modem is in another room 30 metres away. I am not that savvy and I don't see the issue with upload speeds as mine is usually around 3Mbs. As for the 6G network I cannot see that happening for a very long time as we are so far behind you in the US. Having said that I think your fix for those who can use it - it is fantastic.
Unfortunately this does not work for all TVs. I have a Sony XBR 55 X950G (bought in 2019) that has 3.0 and 2.0 USB ports and I tried three different dongles from different manufacturers. None of them worked. At the current OS level, it does not support this. The TV is on Android 9 and currently is not upgradable to Android 10 nor google TV, both of which should support USB to Ethernet dongles. It has the Google TV interface, but still on Android 9. I've heard an upgrade is on the way, but not holding my breath It is rather dumb that TV manufacturers are not including GB ethernet ports, why is the industry behind on something that shouldn't be much more in cost? Any idea on this?
I believe it depends on the chipset and not just the operating system. Why do they not just put GB ports in the first place probably has more to do with the redesign of the motherboard than losing a couple of cents (I would guess).
I'm not surprised that not all tv's support the ethernet dongle but I am surprised that a newish Sony running Android doesn't support it. Are you able to enable developer mode and enable USB debugging on that tv David?
@@oldgoat50 If your TV is on Android 9, most likely. Check for updates. If Android 10 is available or even Google TV, my understanding is that these support USB to Ethernet dongles. Hope this works for you. Please reply with what you find out and also what is the model and year if you have that. Mine was made in 2019, which is when I bought it.
It's smarter hooking up your main computer to the lan hardwire, while allowing your TV to go wireless because the computer is where you would need faster speeds and chances are if your TV is close enough for a lan wire, then 5g speeds shouldn't be a problem.
i have had no problem with my tv being wireless only the only time it loses signal is when my internet is actually down. i don't understand why people still live in the world of being hard wired is better sure maybe at the start of wireless tech this would be issue but at this point there is really no excuse.
Yeah and who has their TV close to their router? Unless you live in a dorm or studio apartment. But most people don't want to run 25-50 feet of ethernet cable across their floor or drill holes when all they're doing is streaming video.
@@ericmatthews111 I have 3 computers 2 are either side of my tv, both are hard wired as is the tv, the other comp is upstairs so wireless , so I have mine right next to the router because who wants to play ff14 wireless...........no thanks. 🤣
Great tip Liron! I would've never tried that because I just assumed tv's aren't "smart" enough to recognise USB ethernet adapters. Obviously I was wrong so great tip. I just have PC's connected to my tv's but this is good to know if a client is having bandwidth issues. Thanks Liron, Happy New Year mate!!
Most smart TV's usually have some kind of Linux based OS. Yes, even Android is Linux based, so most adapters should 'just work' as they will have a pretty standard chip.
Great idea however most smart TVs today no longer have an ethernet connection. I have three HDMI ports and a USB port, an antenna port, and a place for my headset or soundbar. That is it. When I recently went shopping for a smart TV I could find none at my Target, et al, that had any sort of hardwiring ability.
Hello, I have an LG TV 2019 and it doesn't work for me with the USB adapter. I've tried all USB ports. Do you have an idea why this doesn't work? I have a USB 3.0 to Gigabit Ethernet adapter from Cable Matters Greetings from Austria (Europe)
I'm so sad. I tried to follow your advice, but, nada. Router is literally on top of my LG Smart TV. The LAN was plugged in. And then I plugged in the adapter where it recognized it. However, when I unplugged the LAN cable, and then plugged the LAN into the adapter, no notifications were shown. Guess I'm gonna send back that adapter. Thanks for the vid though. Very resourceful.
I bought this adaptor from description and it's not working for me at all. I've got 97 Mbps when I'm using cable (cat8), but when I connect ethernet to usb adaptor the speed dropped to 82 Mbps. Maybe there is other setting need to setup?
Pair this with an ethernet switch and you're all set. The switch is needed if you also want to wire other devices as it will give every device full bandwith instead of dividing it, which will happen if you plug all of them straight into the modem.
Got an even better trick for faster LAN speeds on your tv. Most TV makers cheap out on their NICs and only use a 10Mb NIC. But new TV’s have USB 3.0 ports, so get yourself a high speed USB 3.0 to RJ45 Network adapter and use that to connect your TV to your LAN and watch speeds go through the roof. I did it myself originally out of curiosity and was pleasantly surprised at the results. Those USB LAN adapters are great. You can even use them to make a bridged connection on your PC to give you dual 1000Mb connections to you Switch/Router to boost speeds. Try it. 👍🏼
Good man. Genuinely obscure fixes for very common but not well-known issues. Can’t fix it if we didn’t know it was happening. I thought when Liron plugged in the USB3 ethernet adapter/adaptor into the USB 2 port (not blue plastic tongue), ‘Yeh, this won’t properly work’…but of course even USB2 has a speed of 480Mb/s, which I tend to forget is often not fully exploited. So this fix beautifully exploits an absolutely standard spec of USB port, to massively upgrade the ethernet speed, and takes it off the hands of the ‘wireless’ system, which is hard-pressed in most homes. This is a great channel. Carry on Liron, and thank you.
Guys I totally get what your saying as in my question at the TOP he did a speed test at the end ????? It work for him🤔🤔🤔 maby we got to try a speed test ower selves.. But we all hate wasting time and money. Maby we're missing something Maby we're spot on Only one way to find out it seems Unfortunately 🤣
Can this device be used on Playstation 5? I don't use the internet on my t.v. but we do use it alot with the consoles. Also really love your channel, thank you for your videos!
Some smart TVs and other devices will allow you to change the DNS address and there are lists of faster DNS server addresses you can find online. Use a different one than your ISP provides or is "automatic" on your device and this can also increase your Internet speeds. You may need to test each listed DNS to find the one that works best for you as some are faster than others but most will definitely outperform the "automatic" DNS primary and secondary addresses.
Pro Tip: there is no 100% full proof DNS server out there that guarantees the fastest query times for your given network. DNS Jumper and Namebench are excellent tools to see which DNS servers have the best query times for your given network.
I already get over 300 Mbps download and upload speeds over wifi, on my Hisense U8G. Which is consistent and stable. Because I have a properly setup wifi network. Which means I have multiple Access Points. I currently have five (all currently only wifi5) to handle my seventy or so wireless devices.. To ensure every wireless device can get maximum signal strength, maximum speed, and have no congestion issues.
An easier fix is to not plug your TV into your internet service at all. Let something like AppleTV handle the incoming internet connection and use the apps built into the ATV. Done.
Hi, I purchased the same model USB Network Adaptor as the one you used, however when I plugged it in my TV did not recognize the connection. I have a new Smart Sony Android TV with multiple USB Inputs on the TV including USB 3 high but none seem to work or be recognized as an internet connection. I disabled Wi-Fi and removed my wired connection. Can you advise what the issue might be?
Just tried it and wow it at least psychology seem to have unhinged the TV from the router load and my iPhone is loading up faster. I had issues with Zoom stability in past 2 years which I suspect was from heavy use of the router as the whole family is working or studying dependent on WiFi. Will see how this pans out over next few weeks but heck it’s still a great suggestion. Thanks.
Cool to know. I already have a wired connection to my SmartTV and I'm good with the performance. I just have the slow internet that comes included with my rent and its good for my purposes right now. However I might move soon so if I have to pay for internet I'm gonna get something good. So this is a good tip for future consideration.
Thanks sooo much for the tip. Always enjoy your informative videos !! Can't understand why some viewers are always negative or down right nasty in their remarks. I originally had my Roku TCL smart tv on Wi-Fi then tried ethernet but it was coming off an Ooma VOIP ethernet port that apparently was capped at 100mbps so ended up back on Wi-Fi. Gotta keep playing around with your idea. Presently on T-Mobile 5g home internet which delivers 200mbps. Again MANY thanks for all your video's!!
Thank you for your time Liron, This is amazing, and why do the tv brands, i mean, all have to limit the bandwidth? That suggests that they are using the same card in all the brands from the super high end to the lower.
I assume its cheaper and maybe updating that LAN port would mean a redesign of the motherboard. Also since a 4K video needs 25Mbps, maybe this isn't a big deal enough to worry about?
Every time you design a new device you need to set the specs desired but not reaching the cost defined for the market segment where this device is addressed to. Also is very important to use standards otherwise other devices will not be able to connect to your device. Currently wired connections have 3 main standards that run at 10 mbps, 100 mbps or 1000 mbps. For a smart TV that will not need to stream more than 4K that requieres 25 mbps, using the 100 mbps standard seems to be a reasonable choice.
Humer101, because it’s not needed. 1gb links aren’t even needed on pc’s unless doing huge file transfers. If you know how much traffic a device was pulling at any Given time for day to day activities, you would be surprised
@@PMPerformance yes, pc is a big difference when you play games like Fortnite and warzone, ping change big time when your connection is fast why I don't know, but I tested, and you can see a big difference. We have here four custom gaming computers and one PS4, and I have before 800 mg down, and I have now 1,200 mg down, and every computer had a 2.5 g card, and man is an big difference between the two.
@@humer101 I have a hard time believing you are moving that much data. I ran 10 win 10 images at once across the network to my sccm server and barely broke into double digit bandwidth on the trunks on my switches. I am not saying bandwidth does not help, but you aren’t using it, so it’s moot in most cases for lan traffic. Wan traffic bandwidth helps when you are chewing through simultaneous streams for sure.
My question is how is your upload speeds faster than your download speed? On all of my internet connections my upload speeds are usually on about 20-30% of what my download speeds are.
My Comcast has 200 download and 20 upload I believe, My Son's Verizon FIOS has equal upload and download speeds, My Comcast usually tests a little lower than it claims, My son's FIOS often tests faster than his claimed speed.
@@ronaldgentry9923 I've got Comcast also and mines 50 down & 5 up.......And when I test mine it is usually a little faster than it says it gives me....Like 60 down & 6 up.
Liron, I have a TCL Series 6 TV model 55R615, firmware version 10.5.0 build 4210. Using WiFi or Ethernet yields a connection speed of 80-90 mbps. My ISP provides me with ~500mbps downlead and upload speed. The TCL user manual states "Note: The TV supports only its internal wireless network adapter-it does not support the use of a USB network adapter." I guess some of us are out of luck :-( P.S. 80-90mbps for video streaming from the Internet is adequate is my case. However I've setup a Plex server in my home and watching 4K UHD using the TCL Roku Plex app is painful. It buffers and stops frequently. I have to connect the Plex server to my TCL 4K TV via HDMI to watch the 4K videos. This is not a tragedy, but now I have to consider getting a new TV in the future!
You should use your TV as a monitor and use your PC to play video or anything else. My PC will have full 1 GBps speed from ISP and can display 8K video on JVC 4K without a problem although my JVC is 7 years old already
@Nadski42YT I have tcl 43p615 and the network card works via USB, I pull out some 220 mb / s but only from which firmware version it works in the Czech Republic it did not work
You should buy something other than a TCL. There's a reason they're so much cheaper than other brands. I'd buy anything made in Korea before I'd buy a Chinese made tv. Open them up and the difference in craftsmanship is stark.
Older TVs dont support USB3 and above I think, so this tip applies to newer TVs. Correct me if I'm wrong. Also the cable must be Cat 6a and above, am i right?
Thanks very much Liron, great video! If you wanna improved your wi-fi connection just do the same but buy a USB 2.x or 3.x wi-fi dongle. Do have a look at the TV's capabilities and dongle's speed (limitations).
interesting. I tried that but adding a wifi card to the TV that already have 5Ghz didn't make any difference. Are you seeing something different? Maybe it works for the old smart tv that only had 2.4Ghz?
@@LironSegev Most TV's are still equipped with a 100Mbps ethernet port and equally capped on wi-fi. Using the same USB port as for the wired ethernet shouldn't limit the speed of the wi-fi dongle. So either you're limited by your wi-fi speed on the spot or by the dongle('s specs). In essence this has nothing to do with the 2,4 or 5GHz band; besides that the latter carries faster speeds but over shorter distances. I went from about 95 to 150Mbps on average
Very good info Liron. Thanks for sharing. But the thing is many of us don't have our TV close enough to the router to have a wired connection. Is there any way wireless connection can be improved?
try using 5Ghz and 2.4Ghz and see which one preoforms better. Don't discount 2.4Ghz as it has a longer range so could be better. You can of course change your WiFi to a mesh system and that will help. Like this one: ruclips.net/video/M8OXTyWs_zY/видео.html
I too never considered the manner of connection. I have a Samsung 3D and 😭 looks like my USB is only 2. Would like to know if the adaptor would still benefit me or am I stuck with my buffering? Hope u can shine some light on this area?
I have a better question. If your tv is smart, why are you using a fire stick? I have a non smart tv and am using a fire stick because of that. I’m wondering if the tv is not smart, why is there a network jack on the back? And how can I hard wire my network to the firestick?
I tried this but nothing happened when I hooked up the ethernet cable to either of the free/empty USB ports on my TV. I already get the same connection speeds whether I hook up to the ethernet port or use my wifi. Both of those connections give me basically the same result which is they give me speeds equal to or slightly higher than what I am paying for (150 Mbps). When I hook up using the adapter you suggested the lan connection doesn't show up at all. Meaning it doesn't connect through the USB ports on the smart TV that I have, only LAN connection available is through the LAN port. Oh well, at least someone somewhere made some profit off of my $18 purchase.
Does your TV has a USB 3.0 as well? I guess this only works if your TV has USB 3.0 port correct? Btw what's your TVs model number? Just asking cause I own a TCLas well. Thanks
This didn't work, when I connected the device up it told me I was not on the ethernet connection ? Was only running by wifi? What am I doing wrong? It is an LG TV.
I bought one and it doesn't work!!!! I tried it in both usb ports on the back of the tv, the light on the dongle came on but no internet on the tv. Put ethernet cable straight into the tv and it has the internet. Don't waste your money like I did, it doesn't work.
*sigh instead of being a dick "it doesn't work" how about saying: "hey - so this is the make and model of my TV. Can you help?" surely you aren't that stupid to think every single person on this planet has the same brand and model of your TV? surely? 🤦♂️
TV not close to your cable modem gateway? If you have a MOCA capable cable modem, just get a MOCA adapter. It has a cable jack on one side and ethernet port on the other. Turns your home cabling into a giant wired connection.
Liron this is awesome your the man.. Quick question I cant connect my Ethernet cable 1GB to my TV cuz my router is on another floor. What POE ( power over ethernet) device would you recommend so I can hardwire from the outlet? Or maybe can u do a video on this.. ( to limit wires running all over the place) We appreciate you!
I think you mean Powerline and not POE (POE is running an ethernet port from the router to a device like a camera and the ethernet cable provides power). Check this Powerline adaptor - ruclips.net/video/5JG3x-aNg9c/видео.html
Isn't it possible to get a USB wireless adapter serving the same purpose of increasing internet speeds? After all, you said yourself that the limitations is in the built-in network card.
I think, there must been mentioned which adapter works on what kind TV or what TV OS,or TV features, because many would purchase it in vain. Who already have the adapter tell us about your expierence exactly .
2 things ! A Lot of Smart TV's have a dedicated USB port for Media / Storage and this adapter will not work in some TV USB applications...Secondly. after you introduce a VPN into the scenario, your Speed will be further reduced by a minimum of %50 !!
true, but a lot of Smart TV have multiple USB ports - so just avoid the Media one :) Re: the VPN, move it off your TV and put it on your router - it is far better suited to handle it
I purchased the adaptor just like you said for my 65" LG Smart TV, however when I plug the Ethernet cable into the adapter and then into either USB port on the back of my TV, it doesn't recognize that anything is plugged in under my network connection settings?
Great tip! Some modern TV's also now have USB 3 ports. Plug the adapter in there for even faster speed than the USB 2's approx 300mbit/s limitation.
I just wanted to say thank you. Whenever I feel down and depressed, I start watching your videos and within 5 minutes, I feel calm and my depression lifts from me. You're amazing and I tell all my friends all the great ways you've helped me over the last few years, and how watching your videos has kept me out of mental institutions. Thanks again, you are literally a lifesaver.
@@hayjud4062 Thank you friend...blessings
@@NJNinni My pleasure 🤗💞🙌🏻🌈🌞
My router had a warning for the tv, no matter which port I used, saying to use a better cable that it was only getting 100mbs. I changed changed my cat6 cable thinking it was bad. I reset the tv after going through all my settings and nothing. I went through my router settings and disabled the priatization of streaming over everything else. I rebooted my router. Nothing. I found your video and I'm sold. Thank you sir.
Every time I'm watching your videos I feel like I'm in a classroom. Your information always on point and following your instructions makes everything safer. Thank you for sharing.
Appreciate you being here 🔥 but there is no homework 😂
You just got detention for talking during class! Go see the Headmaster now!!
@@tomasotreasaigh111 😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁
Je vous remercie
They are a joke, and u have been pranked
This man single handedly saved my online fps game experience. Before, I was suffering from 200+ avg ping, and I searched for answers everywhere. Nothing I tried fixed my ping. Until I found his fix for internet speed, which involved adjusting mtu size. Now I get lower than 60 avg ping, and I can go back to streaming valorant. Thank you so much!!!
if you look close, the ping on normal build-in ethernet is 4.1ms with the adaptor it´s 37.5ms so the direct build-in ethernet adaptor is better for gaming...
And @Liron a normal tv cant really handle such a speed.. only high end tv´s with some decent chips
@@lucasschrieken sounds plausible, yah
@@lucasschrieken he's talking about liron's other vid, not this one.
Your adapter is usb3, but the usb port on the tv is only usb 2, so you're limited to the speed of the usb 2.0 port (max 480mbps). So the gigabit adapter is a bit overkill. You want to find a tv that has usb 3 ports.
Thanks my downloads are only 60 minutes instead of an 1 hour
We y
Pro tip: if you download them in two sessions they only take 30 minutes each
@@CowmanUK or it'll take half an hour
Brilliant 🤣🤣🤣🤣
😎
Thanks Liron! Saw this vid at the same time I was installing a new modem/router. The combination of connecting the smart TV to the LAN port (2.5G) and carefully placing the modem, and tidying up a few other things saw the speed jump from mid-120s down to a consistent 195mbps. Win!
No.. thhats 0 diff.. 100 to 400 is a dif.. 40 is a bump.. someone else enters room and ur number will drop.
@@Bumpa1962 A year down the track, I still get consistently higher speeds, nearly zero drop-outs and a better, more consistent signal for my devices. But since you say there's 0 diff... Hey, thanks for clearing that up for me
I bought two from Amazon and neither one worked.
@@lindariggo876got exact same one in vid….made no difference to me
The thing to remember about Wi-Fi is that in your router the Wi-Fi radio is sitting on a single interface port. So imagine all of your wireless devices are sharing a single port inside the router, the more devices you have and the more they're doing the longer they're going to have to wait their turn to get data in and out. Sure when it's their turn to transmit it transmits fairly quickly but then the lag between it transmitting and then the router taking a moment to talk to all the other devices, then getting your data back and waiting for your device to grab a time slot, it can slow down the connection overall quite drastically. also in some cases it might be beneficial to just turn off beamforming if your router supports it. Sometimes as it tries to find a multipath solution to your device it screws up the math and you end up just pumping a bunch of interference.
Also also, wired is always better than wireless. Period. End of story. If anyone has something to say against that, no you don't, you are wrong. If you can go wired always go wired! Always! wireless should be a last resort if you have a wired port on your device. Especially if you plan on streaming a lot of data constantly. And HD video is a lot of data! 4k is a ridonkoulous amount of data. 10 devices all streaming 4k clamoring for airtime? It's a packet traffic jam in the air man....
.... Actually hold on a tick, how can you run a tech channel and not know wired is always better? I mean knowing the intricacies of how Wi-Fi devices talk to each other that starts getting into the hard nerd territory, i grant it. But come on man, that's like tech 101 stuff.....
Oh, also unless you are passing a lot of data at once, and you know you're connecting to servers that can support that level of throughput and bandwidth, paying extra for bandwidth you don't use from your ISP is just throwing money away. If you only ever hit say 300 megabits a second, don't throw away money on the gigabit link, you're never going to saturate it and every unused bit is wasted money. Also also also, just a little life pro tip for anyone who hasn't heard it, unless you're streaming your gameplay, video games only exchange small text packets of your characters position which direction they're looking which direction they're shooting whatever, video is magnitudes larger than multiplayer online gaming data streams.
You could be less of a snarky little twit about it. Nobody likes people who come off the way you do. Facts. You should read some Dale Carnegie. Life isn’t all about what you know… start with humility
very well said brother ....wire is always the best option for sure .........thanks for the info
Yes, thank you 🙋🏻♀️ Wired is even better for security reasons. I run an Ethernet adapter through the wall outlet and have my lappy connected to it in my room upstairs 😁
Thanks for your input 👍🏻🙋🏻♀️🌻
It's not the best option when the device only has a 100mbps ethernet port. All my devices with a 100mbps ethernet port, I use their wifi connection. Because I will typically get 300 mbps speeds or higher from those wifi devices. Connected to my wifi5 APs. And I also have a properly setup wifi network. Which means I have multiple APs ( currently 5) to make sure every device gets maximum signal strength, maximum speeds, and no congestion. But while I have over seventy devices on wifi at home. I also have close to seventy wired devices too. But I run a 10GbE backbone at home and run wired devices with either 10GbE, 5GbE, 2.5GbE, or 1GbE ports.
@ aaronwt . If you have over 70 devices on wifi at your home and they are all on at the same time .
Then your home is the equivalent of living in a Microwave while it is turned on .
My TV's wired internet speed just went through the roof!!! Thank you!
awesomeness!
@@LironSegev this works great I'm almost 600..but sometimes it still lags what can be the reason...that speed is super fast I dont understand... unlimited Internet thru frontier
@@LironSegevdisgusting
I ordered the one in your link. It was the "Amazon Basics Aluminum USB 3.0 Gigabit Ethernet Adapter". The one you referenced and showed in your video was the "Rankie USB Network Adapter, USB 3.0 to RJ45 Gigabit Ethernet Internet Adapter". Will either one of these work? Thanks
I would like to know what brand of TVs work best for this ?
Thing to keep in mind is that most people probably won't need this, as most 4K video bandwidth from Internet streaming maxes out at around 25Mbps, which will barely put a dent in the TV's 100Mbps NIC.
Now uncompressed UHD Blu Ray backups from your Plex server (128Mbps usually), that's a different story. You _will_ need this.
That's HD rate, not 4K. 4K can go up to 85Mbps at a 60Hz frame rate.
Or connecting to remote Plex server being shared.
My router is on the 2nd floor and our HDTV is below on the 1st floor. I can't run an ethernet cable without making a mess of our walls and a subsequent divorce. The average download speed on the HDTV was ~ 75 with the Spectrum router. I bought an ASUS RT-AX3000 V2 Dual Band (and the price was reasonable!). The speed test showed over 300 MBPS download and 11 MBPS upload.
As the router has 4 antennas, I can adjust each antenna individually to optimize the device's speed. A 32" HDTV in our basement is now receiving ~ 250 MBPS download speed now and it's 2 floors down from the router. This router is also supporting V6, so as the new devices include that in the future, it's ready for it. This is the best router I've ever had.
Thank you for that. It all helps. I have been amazed at how slow wifi is, and even more so if you are using VPN. My 300 mbps fibre was regularly showing speedtest results down around the 25 mbps. beware VPN overheads! And VPN + WIFI is even worse!!
What VPN are you using?
@@gilbertrios5283 I have tried various. mine wasnt a question needing an answer, it was more of a warning to people that are less techie
Great tip. I thought I would try this on our LG TV. The TV wouldn't recognize the Gigabyte device on the USB ports. Now I need to do a little more research on how to get this done.
i literally just tried it and it absolutely worked on my LG C9 TV
Great tip, if you get a tv that has USB-C then you should get that compared to USB-A as USB-C is even faster. Regardless, great work and tip!
I just use 5Ghz, AX standard and I get ~300Mbps on my smart tv (wireless), without any third party devices. I live in Romania (Europe), and I have a 1Gbps subscription plan from my ISP (aprox. 10$/mounth - with the ONT and wifi router included).
Hi Liron, Thanks for the tip but was told that the smart TV cannot recognize this adapter as a networking device. Appreciate to know why you can but others comment no. Thanks
Thanks for the tip. I tried it on my LG tv and it could not find my connection. I couldn’t see the issue anywhere to address it. So I removed it. Ideas?
Great video. Can you please let me know how you initially connected the LAN? Thank you!
@3:55
You realize the adapter is USB 3.0 but if the tv is a USB 2.0 your not getting faster speeds of usb 3.0, which are in themselves limited to about 480mb/s .. you are getting some speed increase No doubt.. but not as much as you would / could with more advanced options.. ( things like unsoldering the 100mp RJ45 jack. and replacing the NIC with a 1gb RJ45 jack.. ) .. same with USB 2.0 to USB 3.0..
Wow! I live in a rural area and all I have is the netgear hotspot for unlimited high speed internet. I have Netflix and watching movies is no fun because of the constant buffering. It would take 4 hours to watch an hour and a half movie. I never thought of hard wiring the netgear puck. I just connected the Ethernet cable to the TV and the puck and turned off the Wi-Fi. It worked! Oh my goodness! I can enjoy watching movies again. Why do I need the TV adapter? I wasn’t understanding that part. I’ve just ordered it from Amazon and if it makes it that much better I’m all in. Thank you!
Wow! Now I just need to run a LAN cable from my router, about 200 or more feet. Thank for always providing get tips and tricks.
Hahahaha exactly
you mean like your electricity cables that go into your walls and up into the attic? hmmmm 🤔
@@LironSegev no a new LAN cable from my router/modem to my FireStick in my bedroom.
@@RickMorrisey1303C what he's saying is that long wires aren't really a big deal. If you have a big house, you already have loads of cables. You (or a contractor) can simply reply n the cable and cleat it, feed it through, whatever). Or, run a cable to a computer if you don't use many other devices, especially if it's closer to the router.
A video for millions can't be perfect for everyone mate.
@@LironSegev Ethernet over power works great in my house.
Had month of internet outages - Nothing fixed the conection - even reinstalled Win10
Finally the Fixed got the provider on the mobile & reset modem its working! yap yap about all the old problems 1/2hr wasted this reset took10ms ( do this 1st) if its fooked :)
Great info and a nice straightforward presentation devoid of any bullcrap found on so many other YT channels.I've subscribed
Awesome, thank you!
@@LironSegev Hello can you please help me because my internet is only able to go from 100ms going
@@LironSegev e NC
Great information. I have a question from someone that is technically challenged. Could you plug the ethernet cable that is connected to the USB3 adapter into a WiFi extender?
Liron … I’m truly always amazed at your content/discoveries! Thank you so much!!!
Glad you like them!
Appreciate you being here 🔥
@@LironSegev I’ve learned so much from your vids … thank you again!
So you didn’t actually change one thing on your TV. You added something to your TV. Bait and switch at its best.
Well Liron where I live in Australia we still have a 4G network and my download is still only 50Mbs and there is nothing that I can do about it. As for hooking up an Ethernet cable well, that would be extraordinarily difficult for me as my modem is in another room 30 metres away. I am not that savvy and I don't see the issue with upload speeds as mine is usually around 3Mbs. As for the 6G network I cannot see that happening for a very long time as we are so far behind you in the US. Having said that I think your fix for those who can use it - it is fantastic.
They have 6G in US bro? Wow
U mean 5g? I think u skipped a g
What setting does it have to be on in order to recognize the USB with the Ethernet connected to it?
Unfortunately this does not work for all TVs. I have a Sony XBR 55 X950G (bought in 2019) that has 3.0 and 2.0 USB ports and I tried three different dongles from different manufacturers. None of them worked. At the current OS level, it does not support this. The TV is on Android 9 and currently is not upgradable to Android 10 nor google TV, both of which should support USB to Ethernet dongles. It has the Google TV interface, but still on Android 9. I've heard an upgrade is on the way, but not holding my breath
It is rather dumb that TV manufacturers are not including GB ethernet ports, why is the industry behind on something that shouldn't be much more in cost? Any idea on this?
I believe it depends on the chipset and not just the operating system. Why do they not just put GB ports in the first place probably has more to do with the redesign of the motherboard than losing a couple of cents (I would guess).
I'm not surprised that not all tv's support the ethernet dongle but I am surprised that a newish Sony running Android doesn't support it. Are you able to enable developer mode and enable USB debugging on that tv David?
@@oldgoat50 If your TV is on Android 9, most likely. Check for updates. If Android 10 is available or even Google TV, my understanding is that these support USB to Ethernet dongles. Hope this works for you. Please reply with what you find out and also what is the model and year if you have that. Mine was made in 2019, which is when I bought it.
Great information. But what if your TV is not in the same room as your router. I was getting 300 to 350 mbps. Now only 30 to 50. What changed?
This channel RULES!!! Hail to the the Tech Explainer In-Chief!! Thanks again, Liron!
Appreciate you being here 🔥
It's smarter hooking up your main computer to the lan hardwire, while allowing your TV to go wireless because the computer is where you would need faster speeds and chances are if your TV is close enough for a lan wire, then 5g speeds shouldn't be a problem.
i have had no problem with my tv being wireless only the only time it loses signal is when my internet is actually down. i don't understand why people still live in the world of being hard wired is better sure maybe at the start of wireless tech this would be issue but at this point there is really no excuse.
Yeah and who has their TV close to their router? Unless you live in a dorm or studio apartment. But most people don't want to run 25-50 feet of ethernet cable across their floor or drill holes when all they're doing is streaming video.
@@ericmatthews111 I have 3 computers 2 are either side of my tv, both are hard wired as is the tv, the other comp is upstairs so wireless , so I have mine right next to the router because who wants to play ff14 wireless...........no thanks. 🤣
Great tip Liron! I would've never tried that because I just assumed tv's aren't "smart" enough to recognise USB ethernet adapters. Obviously I was wrong so great tip. I just have PC's connected to my tv's but this is good to know if a client is having bandwidth issues. Thanks Liron, Happy New Year mate!!
Glad I could help!
@@LironSegev I tried it and it did not work for me
Same thing I get
yeah but your ping is 37 from 4 ms,and jitter is 10 from 4 ms .
Most smart TV's usually have some kind of Linux based OS. Yes, even Android is Linux based, so most adapters should 'just work' as they will have a pretty standard chip.
Great idea however most smart TVs today no longer have an ethernet connection. I have three HDMI ports and a USB port, an antenna port, and a place for my headset or soundbar. That is it. When I recently went shopping for a smart TV I could find none at my Target, et al, that had any sort of hardwiring ability.
Hello, I have an LG TV 2019 and it doesn't work for me with the USB adapter. I've tried all USB ports.
Do you have an idea why this doesn't work?
I have a USB 3.0 to Gigabit Ethernet adapter from Cable Matters
Greetings from Austria (Europe)
Same problem with my LG 👍
I'm so sad. I tried to follow your advice, but, nada. Router is literally on top of my LG Smart TV. The LAN was plugged in. And then I plugged in the adapter where it recognized it. However, when I unplugged the LAN cable, and then plugged the LAN into the adapter, no notifications were shown. Guess I'm gonna send back that adapter. Thanks for the vid though. Very resourceful.
I bought this adaptor from description and it's not working for me at all. I've got 97 Mbps when I'm using cable (cat8), but when I connect ethernet to usb adaptor the speed dropped to 82 Mbps. Maybe there is other setting need to setup?
Needless to say, I have one ordered and coming tomorrow.. Thumbs up
Pair this with an ethernet switch and you're all set. The switch is needed if you also want to wire other devices as it will give every device full bandwith instead of dividing it, which will happen if you plug all of them straight into the modem.
Got an even better trick for faster LAN speeds on your tv. Most TV makers cheap out on their NICs and only use a 10Mb NIC. But new TV’s have USB 3.0 ports, so get yourself a high speed USB 3.0 to RJ45 Network adapter and use that to connect your TV to your LAN and watch speeds go through the roof. I did it myself originally out of curiosity and was pleasantly surprised at the results. Those USB LAN adapters are great. You can even use them to make a bridged connection on your PC to give you dual 1000Mb connections to you Switch/Router to boost speeds. Try it. 👍🏼
Good man. Genuinely obscure fixes for very common but not well-known issues. Can’t fix it if we didn’t know it was happening. I thought when Liron plugged in the USB3 ethernet adapter/adaptor into the USB 2 port (not blue plastic tongue), ‘Yeh, this won’t properly work’…but of course even USB2 has a speed of 480Mb/s, which I tend to forget is often not fully exploited. So this fix beautifully exploits an absolutely standard spec of USB port, to massively upgrade the ethernet speed, and takes it off the hands of the ‘wireless’ system, which is hard-pressed in most homes. This is a great channel. Carry on Liron, and thank you.
I seen that myself and thought the 2.0 port was going to be a bottleneck but I didn't realize the speeds it could handle until you brought it up.
Guys I totally get what your saying as in my question at the TOP
he did a speed test at the end ?????
It work for him🤔🤔🤔 maby we got to try a speed test ower selves..
But we all hate wasting time and money. Maby we're missing something Maby we're spot on
Only one way to find out it seems
Unfortunately 🤣
Huge difference in my gaming. Thank you. Subbed and liked.
Appreciate you being here 🔥
Does it make a difference in the speed I can achieve or the type of adapter I should buy if my tv has usb 2.0 port and not a 3.0 port?
Great video BUT you failed to provide info or a link to the conversion dongle!
woops - its in the description now - thanks for the reminder! geni.us/USBtoLAN
Can this device be used on Playstation 5? I don't use the internet on my t.v. but we do use it alot with the consoles. Also really love your channel, thank you for your videos!
Some smart TVs and other devices will allow you to change the DNS address and there are lists of faster DNS server addresses you can find online. Use a different one than your ISP provides or is "automatic" on your device and this can also increase your Internet speeds. You may need to test each listed DNS to find the one that works best for you as some are faster than others but most will definitely outperform the "automatic" DNS primary and secondary addresses.
Pro Tip: there is no 100% full proof DNS server out there that guarantees the fastest query times for your given network. DNS Jumper and Namebench are excellent tools to see which DNS servers have the best query times for your given network.
NextDNS 4 LIFE! Lol jk. But it is awesome and also Free!
The best DNS server is one you run yourself. You can cache most things, and you will get
I already get over 300 Mbps download and upload speeds over wifi, on my Hisense U8G. Which is consistent and stable. Because I have a properly setup wifi network. Which means I have multiple Access Points. I currently have five (all currently only wifi5) to handle my seventy or so wireless devices.. To ensure every wireless device can get maximum signal strength, maximum speed, and have no congestion issues.
An easier fix is to not plug your TV into your internet service at all. Let something like AppleTV handle the incoming internet connection and use the apps built into the ATV. Done.
I've done this! It works great! I paid a lot for that fancy OLED tv. The manufacturers should include a gigabit card in the damned thing!!
Hi, I purchased the same model USB Network Adaptor as the one you used, however when I plugged it in my TV did not recognize the connection. I have a new Smart Sony Android TV with multiple USB Inputs on the TV including USB 3 high but none seem to work or be recognized as an internet connection. I disabled Wi-Fi and removed my wired connection. Can you advise what the issue might be?
Exactly, not every TV recognizes the USB and this guy should know that. My Hisense doesn't either.
Just had the same item delivered today & plugged it into the USB port, my 4K Toshiba tv now says there’s no internet connection?
@@MarcusjMalloy Well so much for that bright idea.
Yes my 3.0 adapter did not work doing this in my Vizio 58 inch
Is it still not working?
Just tried it and wow it at least psychology seem to have unhinged the TV from the router load and my iPhone is loading up faster. I had issues with Zoom stability in past 2 years which I suspect was from heavy use of the router as the whole family is working or studying dependent on WiFi. Will see how this pans out over next few weeks but heck it’s still a great suggestion. Thanks.
Cool to know. I already have a wired connection to my SmartTV and I'm good with the performance. I just have the slow internet that comes included with my rent and its good for my purposes right now. However I might move soon so if I have to pay for internet I'm gonna get something good. So this is a good tip for future consideration.
Thanks. Question. How to check if TV supports 1g or not? Manufacturer, model specs, or somewhere on TV settings
Thanks sooo much for the tip. Always enjoy your informative videos !! Can't understand why some viewers are always negative or down right nasty in their remarks. I originally had my Roku TCL smart tv on Wi-Fi then tried ethernet but it was coming off an Ooma VOIP ethernet port that apparently was capped at 100mbps so ended up back on Wi-Fi. Gotta keep playing around with your idea. Presently on T-Mobile 5g home internet which delivers 200mbps. Again MANY thanks for all your video's!!
Ignore those morons - I would far rather have people like you to focus on, then those trolls who are obviously too stupid to get it anyways 😂
Could they be bots just trying get a reaction or raise your BP? Just shrug it off...
😂 Probably
Wild that you get a faster UPLOAD speed than download. I've never seen that in the US nor Japan.
Very interesting. I'm paying for gig speed and have been wondering why my TV gets less than 100 download speed when it's wired. Thank you
Glad I could help
Thank you for your time Liron, This is amazing, and why do the tv brands, i mean, all have to limit the bandwidth? That suggests that they are using the same card in all the brands from the super high end to the lower.
I assume its cheaper and maybe updating that LAN port would mean a redesign of the motherboard. Also since a 4K video needs 25Mbps, maybe this isn't a big deal enough to worry about?
Every time you design a new device you need to set the specs desired but not reaching the cost defined for the market segment where this device is addressed to. Also is very important to use standards otherwise other devices will not be able to connect to your device. Currently wired connections have 3 main standards that run at 10 mbps, 100 mbps or 1000 mbps. For a smart TV that will not need to stream more than 4K that requieres 25 mbps, using the 100 mbps standard seems to be a reasonable choice.
Humer101, because it’s not needed. 1gb links aren’t even needed on pc’s unless doing huge file transfers. If you know how much traffic a device was pulling at any Given time for day to day activities, you would be surprised
@@PMPerformance yes, pc is a big difference when you play games like Fortnite and warzone, ping change big time when your connection is fast why I don't know, but I tested, and you can see a big difference.
We have here four custom gaming computers and one PS4, and I have before 800 mg down, and I have now 1,200 mg down, and every computer had a 2.5 g card, and man is an big difference between the two.
@@humer101 I have a hard time believing you are moving that much data.
I ran 10 win 10 images at once across the network to my sccm server and barely broke into double digit bandwidth on the trunks on my switches.
I am not saying bandwidth does not help, but you aren’t using it, so it’s moot in most cases for lan traffic. Wan traffic bandwidth helps when you are chewing through simultaneous streams for sure.
My question is how is your upload speeds faster than your download speed? On all of my internet connections my upload speeds are usually on about 20-30% of what my download speeds are.
YES! Same question! My PS4 gets 100 down, but less than 5 upload.
My guess would be, that as a youtube content provider he needs to upload large video files and has "enhanced" (pays more for) connection.
My Comcast has 200 download and 20 upload I believe, My Son's Verizon FIOS has equal upload and download speeds, My Comcast usually tests a little lower than it claims, My son's FIOS often tests faster than his claimed speed.
@@ronaldgentry9923 I've got Comcast also and mines 50 down & 5 up.......And when I test mine it is usually a little faster than it says it gives me....Like 60 down & 6 up.
My LG tv didn't recognise the usb adapter,it only says "unknown device connected" and that's it no internet,nothing. Any advice?
Liron, I have a TCL Series 6 TV model 55R615, firmware version 10.5.0 build 4210. Using WiFi or Ethernet yields a connection speed of 80-90 mbps. My ISP provides me with ~500mbps downlead and upload speed.
The TCL user manual states "Note: The TV supports only its internal wireless network adapter-it does not support the use of a USB network adapter."
I guess some of us are out of luck :-(
P.S. 80-90mbps for video streaming from the Internet is adequate is my case. However I've setup a Plex server in my home and watching 4K UHD using the TCL Roku Plex app is painful. It buffers and stops frequently. I have to connect the Plex server to my TCL 4K TV via HDMI to watch the 4K videos. This is not a tragedy, but now I have to consider getting a new TV in the future!
You should use your TV as a monitor and use your PC to play video or anything else. My PC will have full 1 GBps speed from ISP and can display 8K video on JVC 4K without a problem although my JVC is 7 years old already
CORRECT NOT EVERY SMART TV SUPPORTS THIS
@Nadski42YT I have tcl 43p615 and the network card works via USB, I pull out some 220 mb / s but only from which firmware version it works in the Czech Republic it did not work
Thanks.
You should buy something other than a TCL. There's a reason they're so much cheaper than other brands. I'd buy anything made in Korea before I'd buy a Chinese made tv. Open them up and the difference in craftsmanship is stark.
Older TVs dont support USB3 and above I think, so this tip applies to newer TVs. Correct me if I'm wrong. Also the cable must be Cat 6a and above, am i right?
Thanks very much Liron, great video!
If you wanna improved your wi-fi connection just do the same but buy a USB 2.x or 3.x wi-fi dongle. Do have a look at the TV's capabilities and dongle's speed (limitations).
interesting. I tried that but adding a wifi card to the TV that already have 5Ghz didn't make any difference. Are you seeing something different? Maybe it works for the old smart tv that only had 2.4Ghz?
@@LironSegev Most TV's are still equipped with a 100Mbps ethernet port and equally capped on wi-fi.
Using the same USB port as for the wired ethernet shouldn't limit the speed of the wi-fi dongle. So either you're limited by your wi-fi speed on the spot or by the dongle('s specs). In essence this has nothing to do with the 2,4 or 5GHz band; besides that the latter carries faster speeds but over shorter distances.
I went from about 95 to 150Mbps on average
Very good info Liron. Thanks for sharing. But the thing is many of us don't have our TV close enough to the router to have a wired connection. Is there any way wireless connection can be improved?
try using 5Ghz and 2.4Ghz and see which one preoforms better. Don't discount 2.4Ghz as it has a longer range so could be better.
You can of course change your WiFi to a mesh system and that will help.
Like this one: ruclips.net/video/M8OXTyWs_zY/видео.html
@@LironSegev thank you I'll try
I too never considered the manner of connection.
I have a Samsung 3D and 😭 looks like my USB is only 2.
Would like to know if the adaptor would still benefit me or am I stuck with my buffering?
Hope u can shine some light on this area?
Wow perfect. But will it work if I have my firestick plugged in my smart tv.
I have a better question. If your tv is smart, why are you using a fire stick? I have a non smart tv and am using a fire stick because of that. I’m wondering if the tv is not smart, why is there a network jack on the back? And how can I hard wire my network to the firestick?
@@bobvecchi7981 A fire stick will get more upgrades. Smart TVs typically stop getting upgrades after a year or two.
I tried this but nothing happened when I hooked up the ethernet cable to either of the free/empty USB ports on my TV.
I already get the same connection speeds whether I hook up to the ethernet port or use my wifi. Both of those connections give me basically the same result which is they give me speeds equal to or slightly higher than what I am paying for (150 Mbps).
When I hook up using the adapter you suggested the lan connection doesn't show up at all. Meaning it doesn't connect through the USB ports on the smart TV that I have, only LAN connection available is through the LAN port.
Oh well, at least someone somewhere made some profit off of my $18 purchase.
I have a 5 yr old LG smart TV and the same happened to me, LAN port only. No connection via adapter
Does your TV has a USB 3.0 as well? I guess this only works if your TV has USB 3.0 port correct? Btw what's your TVs model number? Just asking cause I own a TCLas well. Thanks
This didn't work, when I connected the device up it told me I was not on the ethernet connection ? Was only running by wifi? What am I doing wrong? It is an LG TV.
are you going to reply??? I have just wasted $50!!
😂😂😂
Hey great vid..will this work with fire stick???
Yes of course hard wiring is faster but most people don’t have their router next to their TV.
This is pretty neat and it's a cheap solution. But I doubt many average streaming service users have benefited by doing this.
I bought one and it doesn't work!!!! I tried it in both usb ports on the back of the tv, the light on the dongle came on but no internet on the tv. Put ethernet cable straight into the tv and it has the internet. Don't waste your money like I did, it doesn't work.
*sigh instead of being a dick "it doesn't work" how about saying: "hey - so this is the make and model of my TV. Can you help?"
surely you aren't that stupid to think every single person on this planet has the same brand and model of your TV?
surely?
🤦♂️
@@LironSegev wow.. that was harsh 🤔
Hi liron would this work for slow ps4 please. If not please advise I'm grateful for your posts brother 🙏❤️👍
I was curious what speed test app you trust. Thanks.
Thank you Liron, I'm guessing this tip is only for those lucky enough to have internet speeds great than 100 MBPS from their provider?
Yes, exactly. If you aren't getting more than 100 from your provider, there is really no point
TV not close to your cable modem gateway? If you have a MOCA capable cable modem, just get a MOCA adapter. It has a cable jack on one side and ethernet port on the other. Turns your home cabling into a giant wired connection.
Will this USB adapter work on SmartTVs that only connect via Wifi but have USB ports?
Amazing! I just got done running HDMI, fiber, and power wiring through my wall. Now I need an ethernet cable...DOH!!!
Nice and simple ,just what we need .Thanks
Sir would you know if that little genie thing usb helper, will make Tablo work better if added to Smart TV? Thank You Sir.
This is only practical if your router is very close to your TV, which typically its not, since the best postiion is in a upper part of the home.
Thanks.
If my LG C1 has only 2.0 port, is it still works?
Does using an Apple TV or Fire Cube bypass some of the limitations that many tvs have with Liron's fix? Or is it the same problem?
Or same fix I should say
Tried to use that USB ethernet adapter but didnt work. My TV model may not be compatible, bummer. Or the brand of adapter I got is wrong.
Liron this is awesome your the man.. Quick question I cant connect my Ethernet cable 1GB to my TV cuz my router is on another floor. What POE ( power over ethernet) device would you recommend so I can hardwire from the outlet? Or maybe can u do a video on this.. ( to limit wires running all over the place) We appreciate you!
I think you mean Powerline and not POE (POE is running an ethernet port from the router to a device like a camera and the ethernet cable provides power). Check this Powerline adaptor - ruclips.net/video/5JG3x-aNg9c/видео.html
@@LironSegev your the best Liron thanks I will check it out
Okay so what if you don't have the TV hardwired to the net? Is there a usb wifi adapter that can increase wifi speed??
Can you recommend the best tv antenna? Thanks
Isn't it possible to get a USB wireless adapter serving the same purpose of increasing internet speeds? After all, you said yourself that the limitations is in the built-in network card.
I think, there must been mentioned which adapter works on what kind TV or what TV OS,or TV features, because many would purchase it in vain. Who already have the adapter tell us about your expierence exactly .
see description
Gran consejo Lirón. Gracias a el aprovecharé el adaptador que ahora tengo fuera de uso y lo conectaré a mi tv android
Does the ethernet cable need to be connected to your router or connected to a port in the wall (like what you plug a landline in)?
2 things ! A Lot of Smart TV's have a dedicated USB port for Media / Storage and this adapter will not work in some TV USB applications...Secondly. after you introduce a VPN into the scenario, your Speed will be further reduced by a minimum of %50 !!
true, but a lot of Smart TV have multiple USB ports - so just avoid the Media one :)
Re: the VPN, move it off your TV and put it on your router - it is far better suited to handle it
Does it matter what type of adapter you buy? My local pc store has a few brands and not sure what to look for
Does it matter if your TV has an USB 1.0 or 2.0? Will this adapter make the speed go faster?
would that work in my ps5? would it speed that up too?
I purchased the adaptor just like you said for my 65" LG Smart TV, however when I plug the Ethernet cable into the adapter and then into either USB port on the back of my TV, it doesn't recognize that anything is plugged in under my network connection settings?