Can stream to YouTube, but not Twitch?

Huhnt

New Member
I can stream just fine to YouTube in 1080p 60fps 9k bitrate, with no dropped frames, but when I try to stream 936p 60fps 5k-8k bitrate to twitch, constantly dropping frames. Ive tried the bandwidth tester for twitch, all show up with 0 quality. Not quite sure if there's anything I can do to fix it, or if its on my ISPs end. Any help is appreciated
 

PaiSand

Active Member
If the Twitch test shows you 0 quality, then the issue is most probably with yout ISP, unless there's a rule in your firewall/router/modem to block network trafic to twitch servers.
 

Huhnt

New Member
If the Twitch test shows you 0 quality, then the issue is most probably with yout ISP, unless there's a rule in your firewall/router/modem to block network trafic to twitch servers.
I'll contact ISP again, but I've look around for outbound rules for twitch, and could never find a solid answer, stumbled across many different numbers to put. And for the test, sometimes they pop up 80-100 for quality, then when i try it again right back to 0, my upload is 20mbps.
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PaiSand

Active Member
Usually this happens for issues in your ISP or the service above them. Just tell the support you need the rtmp protocol working correctly with Twitch.
I guess Youtube have way more servers in many more locations so it's less probably to have issues.
 

Huhnt

New Member
Usually this happens for issues in your ISP or the service above them. Just tell the support you need the rtmp protocol working correctly with Twitch.
I guess Youtube have way more servers in many more locations so it's less probably to have issues.
Just got off of chat support, they said the RMPT is nothing on their end they can' control. Back to Google.
 

PaiSand

Active Member
Actually, it is.
They control everything moving across their network. It's how networks work. It could be a faulty router, DNS server, cables, switchers, a many more hardware and software realted issues which could lead to this problem.
 

Huhnt

New Member
Actually, it is.
They control everything moving across their network. It's how networks work. It could be a faulty router, DNS server, cables, switchers, a many more hardware and software realted issues which could lead to this problem.
Thats what I love about hired tech support that don't know what they are talking about. I just had my router replaced, cables checked. All that was good. I tried indirectly asking the technician about upload speed and he said something along the lines of if my neighbors are downloading a movie for example, it will drag my upload speed, which makes no sense to me. But anyways, I'm just over it honestly, jumping through this many hoops to possibly find a solution to me just might not be worth it.
 
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