Piso WiFi 10.0.0.1 Bandwidth Limit Setup
Last updated: June 2026
To set a Piso WiFi bandwidth limit, sign in at 10.0.0.1, open the Bandwidth, QoS, or Speed Limit menu, then enter a per-user cap in Mbps for download and upload.
Why Should You Limit Bandwidth on Piso WiFi?
Your internet line has a fixed total speed, shared by everyone on the Piso WiFi machine, a coin-operated WiFi device. Without a per-user cap, one heavy user can eat most of it. Paying customers then get buffering and timeouts, and they blame your machine, not the hog.
A per-user limit shares the line fairly, so ten people each get a usable slice. You set it through the 10.0.0.1 admin login dashboard.
Capping speed is also kinder than capping time. You slow each device to a sane ceiling instead of cutting anyone off. Everyone still gets the minutes they paid for, and your reviews stay good.
Finding the 10.0.0.1 Bandwidth Settings
Bandwidth control is an owner setting inside the admin panel, not on the customer page. Connect to your Piso WiFi network, open http://10.0.0.1, and tap Admin. After you sign in, look for a menu labelled Bandwidth, QoS, or Speed Limit.
- Connect to your Piso WiFi network.
- Open http://10.0.0.1 and tap Admin.
- Sign in. Defaults are usually admin / admin or blank.
- Open Bandwidth, QoS, or Speed Limit in the menu.
New to the panel? Start with our step-by-step login guide. Locked out? Our admin password recovery guide covers reset.
Setting a Per-User Bandwidth Cap
Find the per-client download and upload fields, enter a cap in Mbps, then enable it for every connected device. A common starting point is 3 Mbps down and 1 Mbps up per user. Make sure it is a per-user cap, not a total cap, then save and test on two devices.
QoS just means Quality of Service, a way to control speed per device.
- Find the per-client download and upload fields. Make sure it is a per-user cap, not a total cap.
- Enter a cap in Mbps. For example, 3 Mbps down and 1 Mbps up per user.
- Turn it on for all connected clients, not just new ones.
- Tap Save. Some boards reboot briefly to apply the rules.
- Test on two devices at once. Neither should pass the cap, and both should be usable.
If your board has separate download and upload fields, set both. Uploads matter more than people expect. One device backing up photos can choke a shared line.
Recommended Bandwidth Caps
Match the cap to your total line speed and number of users. On a slow 10–25 Mbps line, cap each user at 1–2 Mbps. On a 50 Mbps line, 2–4 Mbps per user is a fair balance. Start low, because you can always raise the cap if the line sits underused.
| Your Total Line | Per-User Cap (Down) | Good For |
|---|---|---|
| 10–25 Mbps | 1–2 Mbps | Browsing, chat, light video |
| 50 Mbps | 2–4 Mbps | SD/HD streaming for several users |
| 100 Mbps+ | 4–6 Mbps | Smooth HD for many users |
These are starting points, not hard rules. Watch your busiest hour and adjust.
How Do You Stop Bandwidth Hogs?
A firm per-user cap solves most hogging on its own, since no single device can dominate even at peak times. For the rare repeat offender, watch the connected-clients list, block them by MAC address, and tie usage to paid voucher codes. The combination of cap, visibility, and blocking works best.
- Set a firm per-user cap so no device can dominate, even at peak times.
- Watch the connected-clients list to see who uses the most and who is online all day.
- Block repeat offenders by MAC address if a cap alone is not enough.
- Use vouchers. A prepaid voucher system ties usage to paid codes and discourages all-day campers.
The cap sets a floor of fair speed. The list gives you visibility. Blocking and vouchers handle the rare cheater.
Why Is My Piso WiFi Slow?
Slow speeds are not always a bandwidth-cap problem. Common causes are too many users for your line, a weak signal far from the router, an overheating board, or an ISP outage. The quickest test is to connect one device, lift its cap, and run a speed test.
- Too many users for your line. Upgrade the plan or lower the caps.
- Weak WiFi signal far from the router. Reposition the antenna.
- An overheating or overloaded board. Reboot it.
- An ISP outage or throttling. Test the line directly.
If that one device hits near your plan’s speed, your line is healthy. You just have too many users sharing it. If even a lone device is slow, the problem is upstream, like your ISP, modem, or signal. No cap will help until that is fixed.
If the slowness comes with login errors, our fixes for common login errors can help. The LPB Piso WiFi setup guide details QoS on LPB-style boards.
Frequently Asked Questions (2026)
How do I set a bandwidth limit on Piso WiFi?
Sign in at 10.0.0.1, open the Bandwidth or QoS menu, set a per-user download and upload cap in Mbps, enable it for all clients, and save.
What is a good per-user bandwidth cap?
It depends on your total line. On a 50 Mbps line, 2–4 Mbps per user is a fair balance; on slower lines, cap each user at 1–2 Mbps.
Will a bandwidth limit slow down everyone?
No — a per-user cap stops one person from hogging the line, which actually makes speeds fairer and more consistent for everyone else.
Why is my Piso WiFi slow even with limits set?
Slowness can come from too many users, weak signal, an overloaded board, or an ISP issue. Check the connected-clients count and test the line speed directly.
Can I cap upload as well as download?
Yes. Most boards let you set separate download and upload caps per client, which is useful since heavy uploads can also choke a shared line.