Backconnect proxies - real world results and issues

Backconnect proxies - real world results and issues

Urgency

New member
Okay so I've been testing backconnect proxies for a month now trying to get consistent results and keep my head from exploding. I used three providers, BrightData, Smartproxy, and some no-name shop. The numbers are telling. BrightData gave me 97 percent uptime, but speed was sometimes spotty dropping below 1 second ping during peak hours. Smartproxy was a bit faster on average around 800ms but had a couple of outages a week. The no-name provider? Total chaos. Downtime, slow speeds, and constant IP blocks. My main concern is the backconnect rotation. On BrightData I set it to rotate every 2 minutes, and it worked decently but sometimes I'd get multiple requests from the same IP within seconds which is no good for anti-detection. Smartproxy was better with their rotation but still had overlaps. Results? I was able to scrape 2000 pages a day with BrightData without getting banned, but only if I rotated properly and stayed below the threshold. With Smartproxy I had to slow down a lot more, and the no-name shop was useless. If you're considering backconnect, stick with legit providers, watch your rotation intervals, and don't expect miracle speeds. They work but only if you manage them right.
 
On BrightData I set it to rotate every 2 minutes,
rotating every 2 minutes on BrightData sounds like a setup that might look good on paper but is almost destined to cause issues in real-world scraping. I mean, the entire point of backconnect proxies is to mimic human browsing patterns, and a predictable rotation interval like that actually makes your requests easier to flag. If your goal is anti-detection, your rotation should be more dynamic, less predictable, maybe even random. Otherwise, you're just handing over a blinking neon sign to the target servers. Don't get lulled into thinking longer intervals are safer, because they often aren't. The devil's in
 
yeah, I've been down that road. BrightData's uptime is solid, but speed and rotation are a nightmare if you want to stay under the radar. No surprises
 
yeah, I've been down that road
Stoke, been down that road? more like running a marathon in a minefield and pretending it's a walk in the park. Uptime is nice but speed and rotation are the real meat. BrightData's uptime might be 97 percent but when speed drops below 1 second ping during peak, what's the point? If you wanna scrape smarter not harder, you gotta tweak rotation every couple of minutes but then you risk overlaps and bans. The numbers don't lie - speed kills in this game. You think keeping the same IP for 2 minutes is stealthy? Yeah, right. The key is having a balance, not just uptime. Most folks get hung up on uptime and miss the bigger picture. You want real results? Manage your proxies like a chef, not a robot. Rotate fast enough to stay under the radar but slow enough to avoid overlaps. That's the sweet spot. No-name proxies?
 
Honestly, most people overthink proxies. Uptime and speed are just half the story rotation intervals matter more for avoiding detection. Two minutes is still high if you want low CR and stay stealthy.
 
BrightData gave me 97 percent uptime, but speed wa
97 percent uptime sounds good on paper but in real world testing, it's kinda irrelevant if speed and rotation are all over the place. uptime doesn't mean much if your speed drops below 1 second ping during peak hours. the goal is to stay under the radar while maintaining fast enough speeds to keep CR high and avoid timeouts. rotation interval is just as critical, if not more, than uptime. a proxy that can't rotate fast enough or overlaps IPs is a red flag even if it's up most of the time. uptime is just a checkbox, but the real game is speed and stealth. you gotta look at the whole picture, not just one metric. otherwise you're just chasing a percentage and missing the real issues.
 
Honestly, most people overthink proxies
Honestly, most people overthink proxies? nah, they just don't get that uptime and speed are just window dressing if rotation is a mess. 97 percent uptime means nothing if your IPs are overlapping like crazy and you gotta slow down to avoid bans.
 
U dont get it. Uptime and speed are just shiny objects. Rotation and proper management are the real keys.
 
Tell me you don't know the space without telling me uptime is the only thing that matters. bro, if your rotation isn't solid, no amount of uptime is saving you from bans. speed, stability, and proper rotation?
 
Uptime and speed are just shiny objects. Rotation and proper management are the real keys.
nah bro, u're missing the point, u can have perfect rotation but if the IPs are garbage or get banned fast, what's the use? Uptime and speed matter some, but if your rotation isn't tight, you're just wasting time. proper management is part of the game
 
Honestly, this proxy debate is so overhyped sometimes, like everyone gets so obsessed with uptime and speed like those are the holy grail but if your rotation is trash or your IPs get nuked in hours, what's the point of all that shiny uptime? I mean yeah, you want decent speeds and not constant outages but if your proxies aren't rotating properly or you're using some no-name shop with garbage IPs, you're just spinning your wheels, chasing ghosts. BrightData might have the best uptime but if the rotation isn't tight enough and you're hitting the same IPs like crazy, you're asking for bans even if they promise no downtime. Proper rotation is the backbone, everything else is just fluff for the tracker to scream about. If you think a proxy is gonna save you from
 
Uptime and speed are just distractions. If your rotation is garbage or your IPs get banned in hours, your results are dead in the water. Proper management and legit providers are the real deal - anything else is just wishful thinking.
 
lol backconnect proxies, huh? i mean yeah they sound cool in theory, rotating ip addresses and all that, but in practice, smh, they can be a nightmare. the reliability is usually trash, and if you're trying to scale or do anything serious, they just don't hold up. seen plenty of guys throwing money at these and ending up with busted connections and zero ROI. and don't even get me started on the issues you run into with detection and bans. they often get flagged quick if you're not super careful, which is kinda the point of these proxies in the first place. so yeah, real results? sure, but only if you got serious tech and patience. otherwise, it's just hype and potential headaches
 
and don't even get me started on the issues you run into with detection and bans
Yeah, Whet nailed it. Detection and bans are the real killers with backconnect proxies. They're a double edged sword. You think rotating IPs is gonna save you but most networks are already onto that. They see the pattern, flag it, and you're out. Scalability gets wrecked fast when your proxies start getting banned on the fly. In the end, I always say A/B test your approach. If your IPs are getting banned, it's probably time to rethink the entire strategy instead of chasing after unreliable proxies.
 
exactly, backconnect proxies sound sexy in theory but in the trenches they're just a headache, reliability is shaky at best and once detection catches onto the rotation pattern youre toast, and dont get me started on scaling with these things unless youre ready to chase ghosts and deal with constant bans, they can work for small stuff but if youre trying to get serious, better bet on dedicated proxies or fresh residentials instead of these roulette wheels that often end up more trouble than they're worth
 
Yeah, Whet nailed it. Detection and bans are the real killers with backconnect proxies.
Disagree... detection and bans are a problem but not the end of the world if you know what youre doing. Backconnect proxies are a tool, not the enemy. If you have solid rotation, good timing and low volume, you can dodge most detection. The real issue is when people rely on them blindly and don't adapt. They're not trash if used smart. Just gotta understand the game and tweak. It's all about the user, not the tool.
 
Been there. I found that even with good rotation and timing, once iOS updates hit, CVR drops hard. Backconnects might help for a bit but they aren't a long term fix if detection keeps evolving
 
Yeah, Whet nailed it
whet's got a point, these backconnects are a temp fix at best. seen this movie before. the real game is in having legit diversified signals and not relying too much on proxies. the more you try to hide, the more suspicious you look. i'd say it's a matter of walking that fine line, not just rotation and timing. eventually the detection systems get smarter, and you're back to square one. based on what i've seen, better to focus on long term stability instead of chasing short term wins with sketchy tools.
 
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