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razorsedge
July 28th, 2010, 11:43 PM
Windows reserves 20% of bandwidth for potential programs to use. This 20% cap is reserved without reservation.. meaning.. your Bandwidth is essentially capped @ 20% less than what your ISP issues.

So in this tutorial.. i will show you how to remove this 20% Cap and in return open up your Bandwidth Speed ..

http://i46.tinypic.com/xdh5y8.jpg

- Click Start
- Click Run
- Enter "GPEdit.MSC"
- Press Enter
- Open "Local Computer Policy"
- Open "Administrative Templates"
- Open "Network"
- Open "QOS Packet Scheduler"
- Double-click on "Limit Reservable Bandwidth"
- Select "Enabled"
- Change Bandwidth Limit from 20% to "0" %.
- Apply Settiings
- Restart PC

Complete ..

Thanks to pirate

XxHackThisxX
March 2nd, 2014, 04:51 PM
Windows reserves 20% of bandwidth for potential programs to use. This 20% cap is reserved without reservation.. meaning.. your Bandwidth is essentially capped @ 20% less than what your ISP issues.

So in this tutorial.. i will show you how to remove this 20% Cap and in return open up your Bandwidth Speed ..

http://i46.tinypic.com/xdh5y8.jpg

- Click Start
- Click Run
- Enter "GPEdit.MSC"
- Press Enter
- Open "Local Computer Policy"
- Open "Administrative Templates"
- Open "Network"
- Open "QOS Packet Scheduler"
- Double-click on "Limit Reservable Bandwidth"
- Select "Enabled"
- Change Bandwidth Limit from 20% to "0" %.
- Apply Settiings
- Restart PC

Complete ..

Thanks to pirate


i was browsing here at vc and just happened upon this thread.This technique will not work in windows 7 home premium however.But there is a way to do it through the registry if anyone would like to know.
Open up notepad and copy and paste this:

[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Policies\Microsoft\Windows\Psched]
"NonBestEffortLimit"=dword:00000000

Save as a .reg file.After it is saved,double click on the file to execute it.It will give a warning.Just click yes or ok.Thats it :)

andreysPoild
May 27th, 2018, 12:04 AM
thanks for this article. i have never been able to accurately predict how much bandwidth a site may need, so thanks for the info.