T3 Latency

Aaron Moreau-Cook aaronm at toothpick.net
Sat Feb 17 20:36:48 UTC 2001


I know one of my circuits runs from Seattle to Los Angeles to El Paso (fiber
cut a few weeks ago) to Washington DC and finally to New York City.

Nice to know my packets get to visit almost 15 states before hitting their
destination.

-----Original Message-----
From: owner-nanog at merit.edu [mailto:owner-nanog at merit.edu]On Behalf Of
Charles Scott
Sent: Saturday, February 17, 2001 8:19 AM
To: Wayne Bouchard
Cc: Matthew F. Ringel; nanog at merit.edu
Subject: Re: T3 Latency




On Sat, 17 Feb 2001, Wayne Bouchard wrote:

> Or, perhaps a more simplified and easily remembered figure...
>
> RTT on a straight line run from sfo to dc would be ~63ms. (Seems to be
> roughly 100 to 120 for most real circuits.)
>
> We all know, however, that telcos rarely use straight lines. Still, I
> would not expect more than 6 to 7ms. Perhaps your telcos equipment,
> through some fluke, has you operating on the backup path?
>

Wayne:
  Now there's a thought that didn't occur to me. They may be running me
all over creation for some reason rather than taking some more direct
route. Perhaps they ran out of somthing here in Michigan and had to run it
down to Texas and back to get it connected correctly. I think I'll have
them inventory the path and let me know what it is.

Thanks to all the responses on this.

Chuck Scott







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