Thanks for all the info Patrick! I was focusing more on the volume 
peaks thinking that was the issue when it seems like the flatlining and 
resultant low volume is the actual problem caused by retransmits. I 
will definitely be looking through your NOAAport trends site to get a 
better understanding of it. Thanks again.
Dustin Sheffler
NCEP Central Operations
Not a problem, ping me anytime!   Important to note though, that 
flatlining is HIGH volume... the flatness represents that an apparent 
threshold has been reached somewhere along the product flow
To explain a bit... Retransmits are a capability possessed by WFOs.... A 
retransmit means to send a product again.. this is in addition to the 
normal products, so MORE products are being sent through the same stream 
that has a given capacity... The reason the numbers are negative on the 
chart I showed you, is that chart is produced by one of my NOAAPort 
relays... I have two dishes, each with a single novra and two relays 
each per novra, that feed from my novras to my downstream racks of 
servers.
What this means is, that the reason the volume appears to flatline, is a 
bottleneck has been achieved with how much volume can be transferred 
along the route. I do not know if this volume limitation is  the 
satellite capacity itself (I remember reading a document awhile back 
that 60mb was supposed to be the maximum, but usually it has topped out 
around 50mb... However, that bottleneck could also be upstream somewhere 
that limits the packets being sent via the uplink. I do not know     I 
try to serve, as always by letting the various peeps know when something 
appears amiss!
Hopefully this has been helpful!  Ping me anytime
cheers,
--patrick
…………………………………………………………...........
Patrick L. Francis
Director of Research & Development
Aeris Weather
http://aerisweather.com/
http://modelweather.com/
wxprofessor@xxxxxxxxx
http://facebook.com/wxprofessor/
…………………………………………………………
..
On Wed, 18 Jan 2017 13:20:29 -0500, "Patrick L. Francis" 
<wxprofessor@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
 >Sorry for the delay in response due to the holiday weekend. It looks
 >things have settled down a bit from the higher volume that you sent 
us
 >the screenshot of on Sunday. I'm fairly new to these NOAAPort 
volumes
 >so what is typical of a baseline that you've seen? My best guess is
 >that due to the active weather over the weekend, there was a higher
 >volume than normal with the volume dropping back to a more normal 
range
 >now.
 Dustin,
 Welcome to the Dataflow team! The normal ebbs and flows of NOAAPort
 volume are not greatly influenced by "active weather," but can of 
course
 show an increase during extreme events. The changes introduced by
 re-transmits however can cause NOAAPort to "flatline." Here is a
 highlight of such an event from last Sunday that you mentioned:
 
http://modelweather.com/files/cases/2017/01/noaaprot.rexmits.redux.png
 Notice that the numbers are negative, and I have drawn a red box 
around
 the area of retransmits that occurred from Saturday evening through
 Sunday, then the normal ebbs and flows of volume resumed. The problem
 with the "flatlining" is that it can cause delays in product receipt
 that most would not notice unless they are overly familiar or acutely
 monitor product receipt times; but of course, it is something that
 should not occur. The first link on my personal site displays live
 statistics on my NOAAPort Array: http://modelweather.com/ Feel free 
to
 look anytime you wish. In the title bar of the Volume Chart is a link 
to
 "History" that will display volume archives by day, week, month, and
 year. Feel free to peruse them to help heighten your understanding of
 NOAAPort trends, and feel free to ping me whenever you like. We 
weather
 peeps have to stick together!
 cheers,
 --patrick
 ??????????????????????...........
 Patrick L. Francis
 Director of Research & Development
 Aeris Weather
 http://aerisweather.com/
 http://modelweather.com/
 wxprofessor@xxxxxxxxx
 http://facebook.com/wxprofessor/
 ??????????????????????
 ..


