Whoops sorry about that, live & learn I suppose.
Thanks for all the help here & for correcting my mistakes. I've set up a new monitor with ::1 at the end & it seems to be working. If it's ok ill post the graph here in a few days as I'm still a bit unsure as to how to fully interpret it.
Thanks
Do let us know. You should get an idea after a few hours. The graph shows only 24 hours anyway.. so post it in the morning 
Thanks. Have been away but here is the graph from today, as I said I'm still not sure how to interpret it, any help would be great ?
https://www.thinkbroadband.com/broadband/monitoring/...
On the basis of the graph you shared:
Your line is absolutely fine in the middle of the night, but during the day it seems to have very high jitter - i.e. in every 100 second window, a few packets seem to take a very long time to come back.. (the yellow spikiness in max latency). The average is blue and isn't too bad which shows it's a few packets (5-10% maybe?) that are having issues.
This could be a congested line, backhaul.. or so,ething else. Unless you're flatlining (using all the capacity) your broadband connection then I would say it's not normal. If you are hammering the connection from 10:45 to 00:45 or so, then it would explain this.
However when I look at the history (for everyone else's benefit this is an IPv6 address ending ::1; others won't see this), the graph is not consistently showing the above. Your weekend was completely clear/normal.. Last week you had the same pattern most of the time.
If you're downloading heavily then it may be normal. If not, you need to speak to your provider.
seb