Your speed testing is lying to you, here's why

Your speed testing is lying to you, here's why

Nexus

New member
Alright I have to ask this because my dashboard is lighting up with failed jobs again, has anyone else noticed that the standard 'ping a server' or 'curl a file' method for testing proxy speeds gives you completely useless numbers for actual use cases, like I'll see someone post their method of testing 1000 proxies by hitting google.com and sorting by response time and then they're shocked when their scraping script times out or their ad verification hits a brick wall. Here's the thing though, you're not testing latency to a random CDN node in a clean environment, you're trying to measure throughput under load with your specific traffic pattern and geo-targeting, which is an entirely different beast. Back in the day when you got an IP from a pool it was just that, a clean residential line, now with backconnect architectures and carrier-grade NAT the exit node you test might not be the one your actual session uses ten minutes later when you're deep in a scraping loop. My agency spends way too much time debugging this for clients who buy proxies based on some flashy speed test page from a provider that just shows them the best possible route under zero load, not the real-world performance during their 3 AM EST scraping run targeting UK mobile carriers. You need to be simulating your exact traffic pattern against your actual target domain over a sustained period and logging not just initial connection but packet loss and stability over time otherwise you're just optimizing for a number that doesn't translate to your use case at all.
 
Alright I have to ask this because my dashboard is lighting up with failed jobs again, has anyone else noticed that the standard 'ping a server' or 'curl a file' method for testing proxy speeds gives you completely useless numbers for actual use cases, like I'll see someone post their method of testing 1000 proxies by hitting google. com and sorting by response time and then they're shocked when their scraping script times out or their ad verification hits a brick wall.
But isn't it possible that those quick ping tests are just a starting point, like a baseline? maybe they serve as a rough filter to cut down the pool, then you gotta do real-world testing for final picks. feels like we're throwing the baby out with the bathwater by dismissing those simple checks entirely.
 
maybe they serve as a rough filter to cut down the pool, then you gotta do real-world testing for final picks
yeah i get that, but honestly those quick ping tests are just a lazy way to filter out the dead or super slow ones. nobody's expecting them to be the end-all-be-all of proxy quality. they help you not waste time on garbage, but if you're trying to really get into the weeds and optimize for actual use cases, then yeah you gotta go deeper. back in the day when i was running legit PBNs, i learned the hard way that what shows up in a speed test is often completely different from real traffic performance. now i just log the real traffic metrics over time and test under load. those quick pings are just the first step, not the final say. anything else is just guessing.
 
com and sorting by response time and then they're
SMH at the idea that sorting proxies by response time is somehow meaningful for real world scraping. that's just a snapshot in a tiny moment of time it doesn't reflect how they perform under load or during your actual session. speed tests like that are like trying to judge a marathon runner based on how fast they run a 100 meter dash. in the real game, it's about stability, packet loss, and how they handle traffic spikes. if you're relying on response time alone to pick proxies you're just gambling with your CVR. I'll die on that hill.
 
Here's the thing though, you're not testing latency to a random CDN node in a clean environment, you're trying to measure throughput under load with your specific traffic pattern and geo-targeting, which is an entirely different beast
You're not wrong about needing to test under load, but that line about geo-targeting and traffic pattern being an entirely different beast? Spicy take but a bit of a stretch. If your proxies can't handle a little stress test from your actual traffic pattern, then what are you even doing?
 
Fascinating how everyone forgets that those speed tests are just quick snapshots. CPMs are rigged enough without trusting a static ping from a shiny proxy site. The real test is endurance, packet loss, stability, and load under your traffic pattern, not some cherry-picked number from a CDN. But nah, let's keep chasing shiny speed scores that mean nothing once the traffic hits the fan. That's affiliate marketing in a nutshell, always chasing illusions.
 
Back in the day when you got an IP from a pool it
Back in the day when you got an IP from a pool it was way simpler. now with all the carrier-grade NAT, backconnects, and dynamic routing, the idea of a clean, static proxy is a myth. testing static IPs doesn't cut it anymore.
 
I get where you're coming from but testing static proxies with quick speed tests is still a good starting point you gotta know if the proxies can handle your traffic at all before you even go deeper into load testing. yeah it doesn't tell you everything but it's a quick way to filter out dead or obviously slow proxies. then you move to real-world sim and logs but don't dismiss the initial tests entirely, they're still part of the process.
 
trust me on this one, a speed test that doesn't simulate your real load or geo is just a fancy toy. back in my days running campaigns, i saw guys chase those quick ping scores and get banned or drop epc overnight. famous last words.
 
Your speed testing is lying to you, here's why
That's a rookie move. Speed tests only tell you about a snapshot not the real LP speed, CR, or how your traffic behaves once its live. Don't rely on them for scaling decisions
 
exactly, speed tests are like looking in the rearview mirror. they give you a clue but not the whole story. real juice is in your actual CVR and bounce rates, not some number from a test.
 
Color me skeptical - speed tests are like trying to judge a book by its cover. they might give you a quick peek but real speed and conversions are in the weeds - server response, site code, traffic quality. all that matters when your PBN is trying to dodge google's watchful eye.
 
Color me skeptical - speed tests are like trying to judge a book by its cover
Thanks Void, you hit the nail on the head speed tests are just a tease a little preview not the full show and when it comes to conversions and bounces that's where the real dirt is at you gotta dig into your actual data not just those quick checks
 
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