
Improving the blob capacity of Ethereum Pectra Hard Fork operates in the thresholds provided by analysts, said Ethpandaops in a May 30 report.
The update, which was launched via the Ethereum 7691 improvement proposal (EIP-7691) on May 7, doubled the default number of three to six and lifted the six to nine ceiling. Blubs are data elements included in Ethereum blocks.
The report instrumented 123 tag chain nodes in 27 countries, 29 in controlled data centers and 94 in residential environment to follow the “New Head” event. It is a recorded horoding when a customer declares a block and blocks the new chain tip.
The reference requires that 66% of peers reach a new head in four seconds, or the risk of blocks are orphans.
Work as planned for home users
Graphics covering 50,025 locations until May 28, show user nodes at home accepted from solo blocks built locally in less than four seconds 99.5% of the time, with only a handful of aberrant values.
The regression through the size of the block and the arrival time projects that the house nodes could tolerate up to 14 blobs before brushing the deadline, well above the capsumon with nine blocks.
The report concludes that “home users were able to take care of nine blobs”, validating the pre-fourche modeling which supposed a sensitivity to the bandwidth by the network.
The report then tested the model against a block size of 60 million gases, reflecting the upper terminal under Pectra.
The same regression has reduced a safe capacity to 10 blobs, leaving a narrow margin but always cleaning the envelope live 6/9.
The report noted that a higher gas ceiling would still squeeze the window, strengthening community calls to stop the increases in future gas limits until the sampling of the availability of data between peers (peerdas) shipped in the subsequent liberation of Fusaka.
Managing relay timing
About 91% of the main channel blocks take place through the Mev-Boost relays, which inserts a round trip on the proponents and manufacturers.
The original blocks of the relays have reached a slightly slower new head, the domestic nodes recording 97.1% in four seconds against 99.5% for the blocks built locally.
A distribution route attributes the tail to the relays that delay header emissions as part of competitive synchronization strategies. The simulations of 60 million gas from the worst case indicated a safe relay capacity of five blobs, but Ethpandaops expects the relays to adapt once the competitive landscape penalizes late delivery.
In addition, DThe Evelopers plan to move from the Blob propagation on the PEERDAS under the hard Fusaka fork.
Ethpandaops said that the team is “in mind” in the integration of Peerdas, which should reduce the bandwidth by block and open up room for higher gas limits and larger BLOB accounts once deployed.
The report concludes that the telemetry of the first week of Pectra shows that the 6/9 Blob calendar operates as designed, giving teams of the room customers to focus on fusaka-addability upgrades without immediate pressure to review the bandwidth ceilings.


