My file transfer speeds are top notch for USB3 HD>to quad-core PC running Win 8.1>My Cloud DL2100. My steady speed is 113 MB/sec. Fast. Spec for the DL2100 is 115 MB/sec. No complaints. Except for the other day . . . .

The file transfer speeds mention are what I get. We all know that music files transfer slower, and I am afraid I got under 10 MB/sec speeds; more like around 8 MB/sec avg. Pretty sad file transfer performance, although wireless is great.


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I am transferring data from G-Drive 4 and 2 TB USB 3 HDDs to G-Speed Q 32 TB USB 3 RAID 5 and I am getting speeds of about 23 MB per s instead of USB 3 speed of 625 MB per s. I am using the iMAC Pro with its two USB 3 input/outputs. All drives formatted at MacOS Extended (Journaled). A folder containing 32 large video files, total 1.69 TB took 20 hours to transfer to G-Speed. Why the transfer is so slow? iMac Pro is running the latest Mac OS 10.13.3. I have about 20 TB to transfer and it will take me a week at this snail pace. If I cannot correct this problem and the G-Speed Q stays at these very slow data transfer speeds I cannot use it to edit my videos and photographs. I need your help, please.

Thank you for your response. I installed Blackmagic and I am getting read speeds of 130MBps from The G-Drive and 170MBps write speed from G-Speed Q. My calculation show that if on the average I get 150MBps read/write my 1.68TB data should have been transferred in about 3.1 hours. It took 20 Hrs.

How much Raid 5 could reduces transfer speeds, please? I doubt it could be 7 times slower? Also, I think Raid 5 Transfer is not an issue, because when I did the test Blackmagic was writing onto Q Raid 5 disk and the Raid 5 speed reduction must be included in its writing. So it cannot be Raid 5 slowing the data transfer. The time lost due to Raid 5 is already included in the test. Therefore, the question is what can slow the data transfer by a factor of 7, please? Could there be something else? Could you ask your engineers, please?

20MB/s is very slow that is closer to USB 2.0 standard speeds. Are you sure you are attaching your Q to a USB 3.0 port? If you had access so another computer I would suggest trying it on another system entirely to see if its not something specific to your computer.

Last weekend I moved 6.83TB data on my Seagate Video drive to a new 10TB HGST NAS drive where both drives are internally connected into two drive slots on my old 2007 Mac Pro. It took a little over 11 hours for the transfer much faster than the 20 hours it took to transfer 1.69TB to the new Q drive using my new iMac Pro.

NOTE: I forgot to say that the data I am transferring are a small number of huge video files. Therefore, as you asked before, I am not transferring a large number of small files, which can slow down the data transfer.

Can I try the HGST test tool? Or do you mean they do not work with Raid 5? In this case if there is a drive that is slowing the data transfer then I can only find out when that drive completely fails, which is not good. It will be really better if there is a way for me to find out which drive is causing the problem. Could there be a third party software that can help, please?

Server Message Block (SMB) file transfer speeds can slow down depending on the size and quantity of your files, your connection type, and the version of apps you use. This article provides troubleshooting procedures for slow file transfer speeds through SMB.

File copies sometimes start fast and then slow down. A change in copy speed occurs when the initial copy is cached or buffered, in memory or in the RAID controller's memory cache, and the cache runs out. This change forces data to be written directly to disk (write-through).

During file transfer, file creation causes both high protocol overhead and high file system overhead. For large file transfers, these costs occur only one time. When a large number of small files are transferred, the cost is repetitive and causes slow transfers.

Office documents can open slowly, which generally occurs on a WAN connection. The manner in which Office apps (Microsoft Excel, in particular) access and read data is typically what causes the documents to open slowly.

The most common causes include disk fragmentation, file system errors, outdated drivers, antivirus settings, and some other Windows features. If you need to transfer files frequently yet find the slow copy speed in Windows 10 frustrating, please try following methods one by one for troubleshooting. Alternatively, you can use a free transfer tool to copy a batch of files at once with fast speed, or even with automatic schedule.

If the problem persists, try following fixes according to your situation: Method 1-4 apply to any case; Method 5-6 are mainly for file copy over network; Method 7-8 might work if you are transferring data to or from USB drive.

No matter you are trying to copy files to an internal drive or external drive, you can use the built-in tool to check its file system, and fix the errors that could slow down the copy speed in Windows 10.

Real-time protection of Windows Defender Antivirus seems like the cause of Windows 10 file copy slow in many cases. During data transferring, it might scan all the files for malware presence and significantly slow down the process. Besides, it can also hold up system resources and affect the overall operation smoothness. So you can give it ago to disable this feature.

Large Send Offload (LSO) is meant to improve the network performance of the system, but it actually allows background apps to consume a large amount of network bandwidth, and therefore slows down the network data transfer speed. So it may be a solution to disable it manually.

Then you can restart the computer and try file copy over network again to check the speed. If the send speed is ok but the receive speed is still slow, just repeat the configurations on that computer sending data.

First of all, make sure your USB or external hard drive connected to the right port. For example, a drive supports USB 3.0/3.1 should be plugged into a USB 3.0/3.1 port, otherwise the transfer speed will be affected.

A USB drive is normally formatted with FAT32 by default, which is an older format compared to NTFS. Although the file copy speed is affected by many other factors in practical use, NTFS formatted hard drives do have tested faster on benchmark tests. Some users have also reported a significant increase in transfer speeds after converting FAT/FAT32 formatted USB to NTFS. If you want to have a try, here are the steps.

New Orbi owner and i'm generally satisfied. I have a PC desktop wirelessly connected to the Orbi on the 5GHz band and when I was using my Asus RT-N66U, I would consistently see 20MBps (that's bytes) upload to a wired desktop. Both PCs are i7 homebuilt machines. The wireless client is Windows 7 and the wired desktop is running Linux Mint 18.3. The WIndows 7 machine is one floor below the Orbi router and ths signal is strong. Minimal local congestion on 5GHz. Downloads from the Internet are limited by AT&T's slow Uverse speeds but every other wireless client is getting all the AT&T can muster.

Since multi-media isn't of much interest to me, I figured turning it off would avoid any kind of QoS functionality (I had it turned off in my Asus) so I turned it off. That's when the xfer speed dropped considerably. I re-enabled it and suddenly I'm back to a reasonable rate. From what I can tell on the hidden web pages, QoS isn't even enabled - or maybe I'm misreading what I'm seeing. And file xfers should be in the background at lowest priority which is exactly what I don't want.

Start by ensuring your wireless client is connected to the closest Orbi unit. Turn WiFi OFF then back ON again on your laptop. Then look at the WiFi link rate (connection speed) with the Orbi unit. Your throughput will only be ~50% of the link rate, so if your client is not connecting at a fast rate, you won't see maximum throughput.

FWIW, I have 3 Apple devices, a RING doorbell, Dropcam and a Samsung TV connecting on 5GHz, the same as yesterday when I saw the 300Mbps rate. Dropcam and TV are not accessing the WiFi and the Apple and RING clients are also mostly quiet.

Good afternoon! I'm quite new to the world of Network Admin (I'm the deskside guy who has been tasked to fix the network). My company has 3 locations nationwide (USA) and we have an M370 with Symmetrical Gigabit Fiber in each location. One of these locations has complained about horrendously slow network connectivity since we upgraded to gigabit fiber and upgraded their firewall from a T10 to the M370.

When I check our systems on the web interface for our watchguards, I noticed that our bandwidth on the dashboard > Front Panel indicates our external bandwidth and our IPSec VPN rates. Both of these are under 32 Mbps, which indicates I've overlooked something during configuration preventing my connections from taking advantage of the gigabit speeds I should have. Is there anything I have indeed missed with what little description I've provided? Do I need to set up routing or should it be automated typically? Is there a handy guide for configuration? I've found what the systems CAN do, but not necessarily how to do it - short of spending time on youtube. 006ab0faaa

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