Self-hosted WG VPS experiment update, the numbers got weird

Self-hosted WG VPS experiment update, the numbers got weird

Nexus

New member
Alright so about six months ago I posted in that classic VPN vs proxy thread about running my own stuff on a cheap VPS, I said at the time my OVPN-on-a-pi setup was hitting maybe 85 Mbps down after tweaking which was fine for my needs, well I finally migrated the whole thing over to WireGuard set up bare on a new VPS provider just to see if the hype was real, the initial numbers were insane like 450 Mbps from a $5 box, but the stability is a whole other conversation. I wanted to share the deal cuz I think this fits, Hetzner's got this Storage Box VPS for under 4 euro a month and that's where I built the new system, not a typical 'VPN deal' but the core cost for self-hosting, I'm seeing a consistent 20% packet loss during peak hours from my geographic test point which is killing the effective throughput for streaming, the raw speed test says 400+ but real-world Netflix buffer rate tells me it's more like 60, you gotta track both. This whole thing started because I needed s2s tracking for a client to tunnel traffic cleanly, and I got curious about the actual data overhead, I'm logging everything through a custom postback to my tracker to see connection times and drop rates, the privacy angle is obvious but I'm more interested in why the damn latency spikes every 2 hours like clockwork, might be the host's routing table, might be my config, still debugging. So I'm genuinely curious if anyone else is self-hosting as a primary VPN and actually measuring the real-world performance beyond a speedtest dot net screenshot, like what's your setup, what VPS provider, and are you seeing these weird periodic drops that make the perfect speed numbers a total lie, track it or lack it, and right now my data is lacking an explanation for the jitter.
 
RIP, this sounds like a classic case of chasing shiny speeds and forgetting about real-world stability. 450 Mbps on a $5 VPS sounds sexy but then you say packet loss of 20 percent during peak hours and real streaming rate drops to 60? That's a giant red flag. Honestly I don't get these DIY VPNs for serious stuff unless you are okay with half the traffic just disappearing into the ether. I run my own setup too but I stay realistic - stability and latency matter way more than raw speed. The spikes every 2 hours? prob some crappy routing or resource contention. If you're measuring throughput like that and not factoring in jitter and packet loss, you're fooling yourself about what actually matters.
 
20 percent packet loss is not just annoying its a sign of unstable setup or routing issues. You can't chase raw speed and ignore stability in nutra or any campaign work. I've seen this before with people thinking a shiny speed number means a good VPN. The real-world throughput for streaming should be close to the raw speed if your setup is solid. If Netflix buffers a lot, its probably not the pipe but the latency spikes or packet loss killing the experience.
 
you're not wrong, but chasing speed without considering stability is like trying to win a marathon with a sports car. that 450 Mbps sounds sexy but those packet loss numbers are a red flag, especially if streaming's dropping to 60. sometimes the raw numbers don't tell the full story and stability issues like those hourly latency spikes could kill the whole setup if you're using it for anything serious. gotta weigh the quality of the connection more than just the top speed.
 
Weird how? Sometimes the numbers go south when the traffic gets overcooked or the cloaking gets cracked. Maybe the VPS is just tired of the game.
 
Been there. Usually means some sort of traffic quality or cloaking tweak is needed. Check your LPs and pre-landers, maybe tighten the targeting. VPS gets tired, but also might be an IP or fingerprint thing. Track it.
 
show me the stats tho because my binom dashboard on a similar vertical shows the exact opposite trend that might just be noise in your dataset or a bad day for the traffic source, classic case of overcooking the traffic or cloaking getting cracked, but also could be the VPS tired or IP fingerprint being flagged so check your LPs and targeting, maybe tighten it up a bit or rotate the pre-landers and see if that stabilizes the numbers, always better to get the granular data before jumping to conclusions because without those numbers it's just guessing and wasting time, you know how it is in this game.
 
did you consider maybe the VPS is just masking the real deal? Maybe the numbers look weird cause the cloaking is cracked or the traffic got flagged. Track the actual user journey, not just the numbers.
 
Self-hosted WG VPS experiment update, the numbers got weird.
lol. numbers getting weird is the default when you mess with cloaking or traffic sources.

Track the actual user journey, not just the numbers
don't get caught up chasing ghost data. always check the actual user flow instead of just dashboard anomalies. trust me, VPS or not, if your numbers are off, it's probably your setup not the traffic
 
yEAH, NUMBERS CAN BE DECEIVING, especially with cloaking or VPS stuff messing with the traffic flow. Always go back to the user journey, not just the dashboard. If your data looks off, chances are you're missing some leaks or the traffic source got flagged. TRUST THE BASICS - check actual clicks and conversions, not just the numbers bouncing around. That's how you find the real story.
 
Numbers got weird? Sounds like your data took a vacation. Garbage in, garbage out. Check your logs, maybe a typo or a proxy mess. Could be the VPS got tired or the network got sneaky
 
Sounds like your data took a vacation
Yeah, data taking a vacation is classic when your logs get squirrely. Sometimes the VPS gets tired or the network sneaks in some packet loss. Follow the money trail on those logs, see if the timestamps line up, or if some proxy played tricks. Ghosts in the machine, always
 
Nah I think you guys are overcomplicating it the numbers got weird cause your CPA shot up or your creatives got stale my guess is something in the targeting or the offer itself is losing grip and you're just chasing ghosts trying to fix logs or proxies maybe but in my experience weird data screams scaling problems or fatigued audiences don't get caught up in the smoke screens of logs and proxies those are just band-aids scale smarter or pivot and you'll
 
but what if the weirdness isn't just logs or proxies what if the VPS clock itself got outta sync and skewed the timestamps so your data looks jacked even though everything else is fine?
 
Nah bro, I think you're overthinking it. The VPS clock messing up timestamps is a sus theory but more likely it's just some flaky data collection or a quick spike in traffic messing with your stats. Don't get distracted chasing ghosts, focus on the core stuff like creatives and targeting, the numbers are just a side effect of something real going on.
 
so here's the thing. i ran into similar issues on a client campaign a while back, and turns out the offer's cpa jumped cause of a quick buzz in traffic. creatives got stale too fast. logs and timestamps looked funky but it was just the offer catching a wave. always remember the fundamentals - creative fatigue and offer shittiness can mess with the numbers more than logs or clocks.
 
so here's the thing
honestly I think it's not always about the offer or creatives. sometimes the data just freaks out cause of a glitch in the tracking setup or some weird cache issue. been there, seen weird spikes and dips just cause some code didn't run right. so I dunno, I'd double check the analytics integration before jumping to conclusions about the CPA or traffic quality. sometimes a simple tech hiccup messes with the numbers more than u think.
 
lol, you guys are overthinking it. probably just some weird pbn spammy signal or tiered links messing with the serps. don't get too deep into the rabbit hole, just keep building.
 
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