After missing the opportunity to "soak test" our Starlink RV kit in the Auckland floods the other week, Cyclone Gabrielle (which is still noticeably upon us with very strong winds) was an opportunity I couldn't let pass. I've learned a lot over the last day or so, and it's been interesting to say the least.

So I put Dishy on our deck (slightly obscured view of the southern sky - the only bit of sky it will voluntarily look at for any length of time here in NZ) and tied it down on my painter's trestle with a few cable ties - so far it hasn't blown away. 

I set up a ping series with 86400 large packets (1448 bytes to mimic you-know-what) to one of our uni machines to last for a day, starting just before the worst rain was forecast. I also put a beaker down next to it for some rainfall measurements - it collected 152 mm (~6") over the duration of the ping experiment. Not as bad as the deluge by a far shot but still, decent rain. Plus a lot of other areas got heaps more, and with Starlink, gateway and fellow users taking on water also impact on what you can do.

I also ran a few speedtest.net tests to a server at a local ISP at different times during the rain yesterday afternoon and last night.

Note I used the Starlink Ethernet adapter for this, not the WiFi from the router.

Here is what I got in terms of average and minimum RTTs and packet loss over a 60 s interval. Times approximate in local time:

  Note:

Speedtest.net downloads didn't hit or exceed the 100 Mb/s mark until about 11 pm, and some runs yielded as little as 6.5 Mb/s down and 1.49 Mb/s up. Average down was all over the place, average up typically in the mid single digits.

On the pro side, Starlink basically remained usable throughout, certainly for someone wanting to follow what was happening.

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Dr. Ulrich Speidel

School of Computer Science

Room 303S.594 (City Campus)

The University of Auckland
u.speidel@auckland.ac.nz 
http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~ulrich/
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