Every time you send requests for more connections you use upload bandwidth that you cannot use for data. Upload bandwidth is also required to request for more connections. Every time you send ACKs (acknowledge that you got the data), you use upload bandwidth that you cannot use for data. Every time you request for more data, you send a request through your upload connection, you use upload bandwidth that you cannot use for data. Upload bandwidth is required to download data. ![]() Also because at least one peer you were connected to had a high upload limit. ![]() When you set 20 connections, you got more download speed for your connection because it cannot support many connections AND upload data simultaneously. When I'm connected to 100 of each, I get anywhere between 70kB/s and 350kB/s, depending on all the other variables. ![]() I get more than 70kB/s from all the other seeds/peers. I get a consistent minimum 70kB/s down because of tit-for-tat from the upload slots. I have 6.5mbDOWN/900kbUP, I set upload slots 10-16, max peers 250-500, upload speed 70kB/s. It depends on the torrent, it depends on your upload capacity, it depends on utorrent settings, it depends on other peers' settings and upload speed, it depends on the number of seeds/peers in the swarm, it depends on latency between peers, etc.
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