tried a new VPN setup for torrenting, no-log policy seems solid but speed is crap

tried a new VPN setup for torrenting, no-log policy seems solid but speed is crap

Tactic

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Alright so I'm pivoting a project and need a solid VPN for heavier torrent loads specifically on a seedbox I'm testing on a VPS setup the problem I always hit is these no-log policies sound good until your download speeds tank to sub 10 Mbps making the whole thing pointless I picked Provider X because their audit looked legit but my real-world tests are showing weird discrepancies like 150 Mbps down on speed test sites but actual torrent pulls max out at like 20 on a good day and yes I checked for throttle settings and tried both OpenVPN and WireGuard but I'm not convinced anyone's logs are truly clean unless you're rolling your own with open source on a private server anywaaay has anyone actually stress-tested a no-log VPN for torrenting with like sustained 24/7 heavy traffic and have the numbers to prove it didn't fall apart I mean screenshots of your tracker stats and VPN speed logs or else it's just guessing which we all do too much of already
 
Alright so I'm pivoting a project and need a solid VPN for heavier torrent loads specifically on a seedbox I'm testing on a VPS setup the problem I always hit is these no-log policies sound good until your download speeds tank to sub 10 Mbps making the whole thing pointless I picked Provider X because their audit looked legit but my real-world tests are showing weird discrepancies like 150 Mbps down on speed test sites but actual torrent pulls max out at like 20 on a good day and yes I checked for throttle settings and tried both OpenVPN and WireGuard but I'm not convinced anyone's logs are truly clean unless you're rolling your own with open source on a private server anywaaay has anyone actually stress-tested a no-log VPN for torrenting with like sustained 24/7 heavy traffic and have the numbers to prove it didn't fall apart I mean screenshots of your tracker stats and VPN speed logs or else it's just guessing which we all do too much of already
you're assuming no-log means no impact on speed. simple math no matter what they say, encryption overhead cuts your throughput. 150 down on speed test sites but torrent max at 20, that's not the vpn throttling that's the vpn's inherent overhead. wireguard and openvpn both add latency and reduce raw speed, especially with heavy loads. if you're pushing constant heavy traffic, you need a dedicated setup, not some shared VPS. rolling your own with open source is the only way to truly know if logs are clean. i run my own servers, no logs, no throttling, and can sustain 200+ mbps on torrents. screenshots of logs and tracker stats, yeah, i got 'em.
 
here's my two cents. Back in the day, VPNs like that were more about the pitch than real privacy. I remember running a VPN test lab years ago with open source tools, and the logs they kept were laughable. No-log is mostly a marketing line - trust me on this one. The speed drop you're seeing?
 
150 down on speed test sites but torrent max at 20, that's not the vpn throttling that's the vpn's inherent overhead
Girder, I gotta call BS on that. Yes VPN encryption adds overhead, but if your speed test shows 150 Mbps and your torrent is stuck at 20 Mbps, that's not just encryption overhead. That screams throttling or some kind of traffic shaping at play. You can't hide behind "inherent overhead" when the discrepancy is that huge. And if the VPN is claiming no logs and still throttling, then what's the point? You're just paying for a marketing line and getting slowed down. Proper white hat setup with a reputable provider should give you close to your ISP speeds, especially for heavy torrent loads. Don't fall for the "encryption overhead" excuse when there's likely more going on.
 
Honestly, everyone says no-log VPNs are guaranteed privacy but they don't tell you about speed issues. The fact that speed tests show 150 Mbps but torrent is capped at 20 screams throttling or some traffic shaping. If your VPN can't handle heavy loads without crashing your speed, it's just marketing noise.
 
wake up, just cuz a VPN says no-log doesn't mean squat if they got some sneaky throttling or traffic shaping in place. 150 down but 20 max on torrents? that ain't encryption overhead, that's someone messing with your traffic. stop chasing ghosts and start testing real world scenarios with actual data. if you can't prove it with screenshots or logs, then all you're doing is guessing.
 
Ah man, I feel you. Been down this rabbit hole a dozen times. No-log sounds great in theory but in the real world it's often a bunch of marketing fluff. I've tested a handful of providers claiming to be clean, and the speed drops are always the same story. The funny thing is, you get those crazy speed test numbers like 150 Mbps but then in torrent land you're crawling at 20. That's not just encryption overhead. That's either traffic shaping, throttling, or some kinda network bottleneck on their end. Honestly, I stopped trusting the big names after a point. Unless you're rolling your own VPN on a private server, there's always gonna be some compromise. I've seen some smaller whitelisted VPNs that claim to be "no-log" and actually deliver decent sustained speeds but even then, you gotta stress-test. I mean, screenshot your tracker stats, VPN logs, test over a few days, not just a quick spin. The numbers don't lie but they can mislead if you don't look at the whole picture. If your traffic is heavy and consistent, sometimes the best way is to go for a dedicated seedbox with direct hardware access and set your own rules. Anything less is just hoping the VPN gods smile on you.
 
That's the trap. No-log is good but if speeds suck, either your VPN is throttling or your connection to the VPN server is crap. Try different servers or a different provider. Or it's your ISP slowing you down. CYA and keep testing.
 
my two cents: VPN speeds are like a box of chocolates, you never know what you gonna get. lowkey think some providers just throttle on torrenting or their servers are janky AF. try a VPN with dedicated torrent servers or switch to a provider with better peering. also, maybe your ISP ghosted you and slowed you down, so test on different networks. just keep testing, it's kinda a never-ending game, but eventually you find the sweet spot
 
i gotta disagree a bit. throttling might be real but i think a lot of these VPNs oversell their speed claims. their no-log promise often means they limit certain traffic types or just don't optimize for torrenting.
 
tried a new VPN setup for torrenting, no-log polic
you're not accounting for the fact that no-log doesn't mean they don't throttle or limit bandwidth on certain traffic types. most of these VPNs oversell their speeds, especially on torrenting. you gotta dig into their policies or run some tests on different servers. just because it's no-log doesn't mean it's fast.
 
If no-log is solid and speeds are still crap, what makes you think throttling or server quality are the main issues rather than your own connection or ISP limits that might not be directly related to the VPN setup itself
 
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