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External USB20 HDD writing speed?
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External USB20 HDD writing speed?
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External USB20 HDD writing speed? |
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#1 |
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I have a Maxtor 300Gb USB 2.0 harddrive and when I did a benchmark (with FreshDevise), it gave med this speed:
Write 1.1 Mb/s, Read 60.5Mb/s speed. I also know that the spec for USB2.0 480Mbps, but not really sure how to read different benchmark speed I get!? But can anybody confirm that a USB 2.0 writing-speed on 1.1Mb/s is what I could expect, or is there anything wrong here?? Pvest |
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#2 |
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"Pvest" <no@mail.no> wrote in message news:44dcf7a1$1@news.broadpark.no... I have a Maxtor 300Gb USB 2.0 harddrive and when I did a benchmark (with FreshDevise), it gave med this speed: Write 1.1 Mb/s, Read 60.5Mb/s speed. I also know that the spec for USB2.0 480Mbps, but not really sure how to read different benchmark speed I get!? But can anybody confirm that a USB 2.0 writing-speed on 1.1Mb/s is what I could expect, or is there anything wrong here?? Pvest Pvest: While the following doesn't directly answer your query, you may be interested in some tests we did earlier this year. Our interest was in "real-life" scenarios, i.e., data transfer rate between a PC's HD and the USB device. We ran some speed tests (copying data from the HD to USB devices and vice versa) using a variety of flash drive 512 MB & 1 GB models and a number of minidrives between 4 GB - 8 GB. Two desktop medium-powered PCs were used in the tests. All devices were USB 2.0. The "test" involved copying 1 GB of data - 12 folders comprising 503 files - (500 MB of data where 512 MB flash drives were involved) between internal hard drives and the USB devices. The results were as follows - all averages with roughly a 5% - 10% differential between different models of the same capacity. Flash drive Copying from HD to flash drive -- 200 MB/min " " flash drive to HD -- 250 MB/min Minidrives Copying from HD to minidrive -- 430 MB/min " " minidrive to HD -- 500 MB/min Considerably faster with minidrives. Copying from HD to USB external hard drive - 680 MB/min (the data transfer rate was much wider where USB EHDs were involved - ranging between 650 MB/min to 800 MB/min, although in most cases the average was slightly under 700 MB/min). We did not time test from the USB device to the internal HD. Anna |
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#3 |
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480 Mbps is mega bits per second; 8 bits equal a byte, so 60
MB/sec is right, but write speed depends on the connection, the overhead, the antivirus may be scanning on writes, etc. You're getting full USB 2.0 reads, but the writes are slow, many things can be causing this. "Anna" <myname@myisp.net> wrote in message news:ewQv1YbvGHA.3364@TK2MSFTNGP02.phx.gbl... | | "Pvest" <no@mail.no> wrote in message news:44dcf7a1$1@news.broadpark.no... | I have a Maxtor 300Gb USB 2.0 harddrive and when I did a benchmark (with | FreshDevise), it gave med this speed: | | Write 1.1 Mb/s, | | Read 60.5Mb/s speed. | | I also know that the spec for USB2.0 480Mbps, but not really sure how to | read different benchmark speed I get!? | | But can anybody confirm that a USB 2.0 writing-speed on 1.1Mb/s is what I | could expect, or is there anything wrong here?? | Pvest | | | Pvest: | While the following doesn't directly answer your query, you may be | interested in some tests we did earlier this year. Our interest was in | "real-life" scenarios, i.e., data transfer rate between a PC's HD and the | USB device. | | We ran some speed tests (copying data from the HD to USB devices and vice | versa) using a variety of flash drive 512 MB & 1 GB models and a number of | minidrives between 4 GB - 8 GB. Two desktop medium-powered PCs were used in | the tests. All devices were USB 2.0. | | The "test" involved copying 1 GB of data - 12 folders comprising 503 files - | (500 MB of data where 512 MB flash drives were involved) between internal | hard drives and the USB devices. The results were as follows - all averages | with roughly a 5% - 10% differential between different models of the same | capacity. | | Flash drive | Copying from HD to flash drive -- 200 MB/min | " " flash drive to HD -- 250 MB/min | | Minidrives | Copying from HD to minidrive -- 430 MB/min | " " minidrive to HD -- 500 MB/min | | Considerably faster with minidrives. | | Copying from HD to USB external hard drive - 680 MB/min (the data transfer | rate was much wider where USB EHDs were involved - ranging between 650 | MB/min to 800 MB/min, although in most cases the average was slightly under | 700 MB/min). We did not time test from the USB device to the internal HD. | Anna | | |
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#4 |
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On Fri, 11 Aug 2006 23:33:17 +0200, "Pvest" <no@mail.no> wrote:
>I have a Maxtor 300Gb USB 2.0 harddrive and when I did a benchmark (with FreshDevise), it gave med this speed: > >Write 1.1 Mb/s, > >Read 60.5Mb/s speed. > >I also know that the spec for USB2.0 480Mbps, but not really sure how to read different benchmark speed I get!? > >But can anybody confirm that a USB 2.0 writing-speed on 1.1Mb/s is what I could expect, or is there anything wrong here?? Something's very wrong. |
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#5 |
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"Loren Pechtel" <lorenpechtel@hotmail.invalid.com> wrote in message
news:%230hbHpjvGHA.4160@TK2MSFTNGP06.phx.gbl... > On Fri, 11 Aug 2006 23:33:17 +0200, "Pvest" <no@mail.no> wrote: > >>I have a Maxtor 300Gb USB 2.0 harddrive and when I did a benchmark (with >>FreshDevise), it gave med this speed: >> >>Write 1.1 Mb/s, >> >>Read 60.5Mb/s speed. >> >>I also know that the spec for USB2.0 480Mbps, but not really sure how to >>read different benchmark speed I get!? >> >>But can anybody confirm that a USB 2.0 writing-speed on 1.1Mb/s is what I >>could expect, or is there anything wrong here?? > > Something's very wrong. At 300 GB capacity, I'm going to assumt it is a full out 3.5" drive. if it is an IDE drive inside, it should run at 500 MB/s, SATA-I runs at 1.5 GB/s, and (in your case the most likely) SATA-II runs at 3.0 GB/s. Take note these are maximum data rates for the HDD ONLY. Going through USB 2.0, the maximum is 480 Mbps or MegaBITS per second, not megaBYTES per second. The data transfer rate is different than the transfer rate of the hard drives. There are 8 bits in a byte. So, at 480 megaBITS per second translates into approximately 60 megaBYTES per second (Divide by 8). So, although your write speed does seem a little slow, for an exterenal drive, your read speed sounds like it's on par. Your speed cap is caused by the USB transfer rate and not the Hard drive. -- Lawrence Wong Computer Systems & Networking Technology Student Centennial College, School of Science & Technology Toronto, Ontario, Canada |
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#6 |
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<wong-lawrence@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:%23TCTn7HwGHA.4612@TK2MSFTNGP02.phx.gbl... > "Loren Pechtel" <lorenpechtel@hotmail.invalid.com> wrote in message > news:%230hbHpjvGHA.4160@TK2MSFTNGP06.phx.gbl... >> On Fri, 11 Aug 2006 23:33:17 +0200, "Pvest" <no@mail.no> wrote: >> >>>I have a Maxtor 300Gb USB 2.0 harddrive and when I did a benchmark (with >>>FreshDevise), it gave med this speed: >>> >>>Write 1.1 Mb/s, >>> >>>Read 60.5Mb/s speed. >>> >>>I also know that the spec for USB2.0 480Mbps, but not really sure how to >>>read different benchmark speed I get!? >>> >>>But can anybody confirm that a USB 2.0 writing-speed on 1.1Mb/s is what I >>>could expect, or is there anything wrong here?? >> >> Something's very wrong. > > > At 300 GB capacity, I'm going to assumt it is a full out 3.5" drive. > > if it is an IDE drive inside, it should run at 500 MB/s, SATA-I runs at > 1.5 GB/s, and (in your case the most likely) SATA-II runs at 3.0 GB/s. > Take note these are maximum data rates for the HDD ONLY. > > Going through USB 2.0, the maximum is 480 Mbps or MegaBITS per second, not > megaBYTES per second. The data transfer rate is different than the > transfer rate of the hard drives. > > There are 8 bits in a byte. So, at 480 megaBITS per second translates into > approximately 60 megaBYTES per second (Divide by 8). > > So, although your write speed does seem a little slow, for an exterenal > drive, your read speed sounds like it's on par. Your speed cap is caused > by the USB transfer rate and not the Hard drive. > > > > -- > Lawrence Wong > Computer Systems & Networking Technology Student > Centennial College, School of Science & Technology > Toronto, Ontario, Canada A small correction: EIDE drives can run at a maximum transfer rate of 133 MB/s, not 500. -- Lawrence Wong Computer Systems & Networking Technology Student Centennial College, School of Science & Technology Toronto, Ontario, Canada |
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