Trying to Understand Proxy Speed Tests, Why Are Some Providers So Slow?

Trying to Understand Proxy Speed Tests, Why Are Some Providers So Slow?

Ambush

New member
alright, so I've been messing around with proxy speed testing lately and honestly I'm more confused than ever. Like, I see some guys swear by certain providers because their proxies are lightning fast, but then I run the same tests and the speed is trash. What gives? I've tried a bunch of free and paid options and the results are all over the place. Some proxies that look legit in their claims turn into total snails when I test, while others seem to fly but then get flagged on the real campaigns. The big issue is, what's the real method to accurately test speed? I mean, do u just run a simple download test, or do u try to load a few different sites, measure latency, and see how it performs under load? I feel like some providers cherry-pick their testing data or use fancy scripts that don't really match how I need the proxies to perform in real scraping or automation. And the worst part - some providers claim ultra-low ping, but then my scraping speed drops to a crawl. It's like a bait and switch. And yeah, I've seen some dudes suggest running a speed test at different times of day, but honestly that just adds to the chaos. Does anyone have a solid, repeatable methodology for testing proxy speeds that actually predicts how they'll perform when u need them most? I just wanna find reliable proxies that don't tank my campaigns, but man, it feels like a minefield. Sorry for the rant, just trying to make sense of this mess.
 
alright, so I've been messing around with proxy speed testing lately and honestly I'm more confused than ever. Like, I see some guys swear by certain providers because their proxies are lightning fast, but then I run the same tests and the speed is trash. I've tried a bunch of free and paid options and the results are all over the place.
been down this road myself, I get it. proxy speed tests are a mess if you just run a basic ping or download speed. I used to trust those numbers too but then I noticed the actual campaign performance was way different. the problem is most testing tools are only measuring one aspect, usually network latency or raw download speed, but that doesn't tell you how proxies will perform under real load or in automation. I found that the only way to get reliable data is to test with actual use cases, like scraping a high-volume site or loading the proxies in your automation setup and measuring AVD, CVR, and how they hold up over time. cherry-picking data and only doing quick tests is a recipe for bad decisions. I was wrong about that - real-world testing beats quick tests every time. proxy providers hype their speeds but that doesn't mean they'll hold up during your actual campaign. it's a long game and you need consistency, not just shiny numbers
 
And the worst part - some providers claim ultra-low ping, but then my scraping speed drops to a crawl
yeah, I've seen that too. Claims of ultra-low ping but your scraping slows to a crawl. That's pretty much the industry standard now. Ping is just one piece of the puzzle. It's like judging a book by its cover. You can get a fast ping from a proxy but if the actual bandwidth or server load is crap, your scraping speed tanks. Some providers cherry-pick their tests to look good but in real life it's a different story. I've been burned by that more times than I care to admit. The only way I found somewhat reliable is testing proxies in conditions close to your actual use - load them up with your scripts, run some real tasks, and see what the throughput actually looks like. No magic formula, just trial, error, and knowing what's a red flag and what's a fake number.
 
Yeah, you're not wrong about proxy testing being a circus. The biggest mistake is relying on simple speed tests or ping numbers alone. Real performance under load and actual campaign behavior tell you way more. The trick is to run tests during different times of day and try to mimic your scraping or automation load as much as possible. Sometimes those flashy claims are just smoke and mirrors, so focus on how proxies hold up in real use cases not just on the test results.
 
yeah, I've seen that too
yeah, i've seen that too and honestly it's a trap. claiming ultra-low ping but slowing down your scraping is classic bait and switch. ping is only a small piece of the puzzle, especially with proxies. real testing has to include under load, how they handle multiple requests, and how stable they are over time. too many guys get hung up on that shiny ping number and ignore what actually matters in the trenches.
 
Yeah, you're not wrong about proxy testing be
shroud, I gotta disagree a bit. Relying on real load testing is the only way to truly gauge a proxy's performance. Sure, ping and speed tests give you a baseline but they can be misleading. The thing is, proxies can look fast in a simple test but choke under actual scraping load. So many guys chase that ultra-low ping myth, but what really matters is how they handle steady streams of requests
 
Trying to Understand Proxy Speed Tests, Why Are Some Providers So Slow
been there, burnt that. some proxies are just overloaded or throttled, others have crappy routing. check their ping times and the number of hops, that usually tells you what's up. don't get fooled by shiny proxies that claim speed but choke when you test.
 
Trying to Understand Proxy Speed Tests, Why Are So
Trying to understand why some proxies look fast in tests but then turn into crap when you run campaigns, probably just overloaded nodes or throttling but yeah the ping and hops can give you some clues but sometimes it's just bad routing or the proxy provider cutting corners to save costs.
 
People get fooled by shiny tests. Proxy speed in tests means nothing. Real world is all about routing, overloads, and throttling.
 
Man, you gotta take those speed tests with a grain of salt. It's all about the routing, overloads, and throttling. I've seen proxies look wicked fast in tests and then crap out when you push traffic. Sometimes it's just their network getting bottlenecked or too many users on the node. Ping and hops help but don't always tell the full story. Best bet is to test them in real campaign conditions if you can, see how they hold up under load. It's kinda like gambling, shoot your shot but don't rely only on the shiny numbers
 
LOL, u just gotta remember, those tests r kinda like speed dating for proxies. Looks good in the test but when u start really talkin to it, bam, it's slow as molasses. Sometimes it's just bad routing or overloads, other times it's the proxy owner trying to hide their slow stuff.
 
haha, speed tests are kinda like those fake highlights in a sports game, all shiny till you see the actual gameplay. The data doesn't lie but it sure can be misleading sometimes. That's why I always go by real-world results over just the test scores
 
Trying to Understand Proxy Speed Tests, Why Are Some Providers So Slow
hot take incoming: proxy speed tests are like speed dating, half of it is the provider's network and the other half is your own setup, latency, congestion, all that crap. some providers skimp on the tech or just have crap infrastructure and wonder why they lag. you're missing the forest for the trees if you think it's only about the speed test numbers, look at the actual quality of the proxies.
 
But does the proxy speed test actually tell you what you need to know? I mean, is it just raw numbers or does it factor in how that speed impacts your actual workflow or ad performance? cuz in my experience, a "fast" proxy doesn't mean much if it kills your conversion data or messes with your pixel tracking. Garbage in, garbage out, right? If you just chase the highest speed, you might be missing the bigger picture. Are you really testing the proxies for what you need or just going after the biggest numbers?
 
But does the proxy speed test actually tell y
Yeah, that's the thing with these speed tests. They give you a snapshot, but it's like looking at a picture of a iceberg and thinking you know the whole boat. The raw numbers are one thing, but they don't account for how that proxy actually performs in the real world, especially when you're trying to run a dozen tasks at once or get decent CTRs. I've seen proxies that test slow but load like lightning once you start crawling or spammy outreach, and others that look blazing fast but choke on the serps or slow your funnels down. It's all about how the network handles your type of traffic, congestion at peak times, and whether the provider skimped on the tech. That's why I say, take speed tests with a grain of salt. They're just part of the puzzle, not the whole picture
 
Thanks Weave for bringing that up. I actually did some more testing last night and realized that the raw numbers can be pretty misleading if u don't consider how it actually feels in ur workflow. Sometimes a proxy might test slow but still feel snappy in real use. imo, u gotta test in real scenarios not just rely on speed tests alone.
 
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