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    RickJ's Avatar
    RickJ Posts: 7,762, Reputation: 864
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    #1

    Jun 19, 2006, 08:48 AM
    Transfer speed from computer to external hard drive
    I just transferred 4GB from a folder on my computer to a USB2 external hard drive and it took 45 minutes! From other transfers, it seems like this is way too long.

    1. Is there a "standard" transfer speed that I should expect from a transfer like this?

    2. Would doing other things on the computer while it's transferring cause it to slow down? I was doing many things while the transfer was going on.

    3. Comparing various external hard drives (all USB2), will some just be better - and transfer faster - than others?

    Thanks!
    Northwind_Dagas's Avatar
    Northwind_Dagas Posts: 348, Reputation: 83
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    #2

    Jun 19, 2006, 09:32 AM
    Is your computer's USB v2 as well? If not, it doesn't matter if the hard drive is USB2, you will only get speed of USB1.1.

    Doing other things on your computer involving disk operations (such as working in files, saving, moving, etc) will hamper the performance of a copy. The hard disk head would need to move back and forth between the data you're a copying and the data you are working with.

    Hard disks run at different speeds: 5400, 7200, and 10,000 RPM are common. Also, on-board cache will make a difference in performance.
    StuMegu's Avatar
    StuMegu Posts: 576, Reputation: 64
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    #3

    Jun 19, 2006, 10:07 AM
    Hi Rick,

    As Northwind_Dagas says, if you only have usb 1 on your PC you will get slow speeds.

    4gb = 4000mb = 32000mbits (approx)
    at 45 minutes you are getting 32000/45/60 = 11.85 mbits/second.
    this means you are using a usb 1 connection (12mbits/sec) whereas if you have a usb 2 connection you could get up to 480 mbits/sec = 1.1minutes. But as ND says above other factors will probably stop you getting the full quoted speed of usb2.

    I reconed on about 30 secs for about 600mb, so that would give you a time for 4gb of about 3-4 minutes.
    RickJ's Avatar
    RickJ Posts: 7,762, Reputation: 864
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    #4

    Jun 19, 2006, 02:04 PM
    Hmmm. Would have sworn I've got usb2 on the computer, but will check under the hood to be sure.

    Doing some mass moving here at home on usb2 laptop and it's FLYING!

    ... will definitely have to check out that usb card @ work...
    RickJ's Avatar
    RickJ Posts: 7,762, Reputation: 864
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    #5

    Jun 20, 2006, 08:57 AM
    I'm back at work now...
    The computer (P4, 2GH, 736MB Ram) is factory usb 1.0 - but I added a USB 2.0 card.

    I did 2 test copies of a 663MB folder from My Docs to an external HD (100GB, 5400RPM).

    From the USB 1.0 port it took 13 min 0 seconds.
    From the USB 2.0 port it took 5 min 11 seconds.

    ... so just 17mbps for the transfer via the 2.0 port!

    Is there anything I can do to improve the performance, or am I just stuck with this. Is it because of my older motherboard?

    Will tapping on the processor with a ball pien hammer help :( :p

    Thanks!
    StuMegu's Avatar
    StuMegu Posts: 576, Reputation: 64
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    #6

    Jun 20, 2006, 09:01 AM
    How fast does it copy the folder to another folder on your internal hard drive? Is you're my docs folder located on your local machine? Sometimes they will be on the network server (right click & properties to find out) which could also slow down performance. Also try temporarily turning off your antivirus (if you're sure of the files of course)
    RickJ's Avatar
    RickJ Posts: 7,762, Reputation: 864
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    #7

    Jun 20, 2006, 09:27 AM
    Thanks, Stu.

    Ugh. This is not looking good:

    Yes, My Docs is on local machine. No network.

    With Norton Internet Security Enabled, it was 1/3rd of the way through the copy after 3 minutes... and with NIS disabled was 1/3rd of the way through after 2 minutes.

    That just doesn't make sense does it? Shouldn't local file/folder moves/copys go lickety split?
    StuMegu's Avatar
    StuMegu Posts: 576, Reputation: 64
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    #8

    Jun 20, 2006, 09:32 AM
    You didn't say how fast the transfer was from c: to c: (different folder) that should tell you if the problems with your PC or the link. I suppose if the files being copied are very fragmented they could cause a delay.

    Is your computer fast otherwise, if the machine's struggling for free ram for whatever reason that could slow the process down.
    RickJ's Avatar
    RickJ Posts: 7,762, Reputation: 864
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    #9

    Jun 20, 2006, 09:39 AM
    Oops... sorry. The times I was quoting were for the same 663MB folder from My Docs to right under C:. Both with and without NIS I only let it go about 1/3rd of the way through the copy just to get an idea of the speed... so it was looking like about 6 minutes for the copy with NIS disabled and 9 minutes with it enabled.

    Generally speaking, I'd call the computer fast... I've had no performance issues prior to noticing this one... but of course I don't know how to put "seems fast enough" into technical language.

    ... think it would be worth looking into any of the variety of diagnosis software that's available? I'd put a few bucks into it if I thought it could make a significant improvement.
    Tommyp!972's Avatar
    Tommyp!972 Posts: 300, Reputation: 36
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    #10

    Jun 20, 2006, 10:26 AM
    Check with your cable that's connected to the hard drive... makes sure it's a USB 2.0 "HIGH SPEED"... or make sure you have a HIGH SPEED USB 2.0 hard drive

    There are differences in USB 2.0 products that manufacturers don't want you to know...

    This was at a site I was reading about that can explain better...


    """Unfortunately, the phrase "USB 2.0" does not necessarily mean 480Mbps of throughput. USB 2.0 now has three different signaling rates: Low Speed (1.5Mbps), Full Speed (12Mbps), and Hi-Speed (480Mbps). The marketing and advertising departments of product manufacturers like to put the words "USB 2.0" on all of their product packages. This can be really deceptive since most consumers will see USB 2.0 and compare it to an older product with the USB 1.1 moniker and think "USB2 must be better than USB 1.1!" Naturally, the consumer is unaware of the difference between "Full Speed" and "High Speed" (this is something akin to the old naming snafu with floppy disks: does "double density" or "high density" hold more?).""""

    This explains why my mp3 transfer speed to a 1GB card is bad... I didn't have usb 2.0 high speed cable


    So your USB cable or hard drive may not be utilizing the USB 2.0 HIGH SPEED connection and that's y you are transferring slowly

    Just because it says USB 2.0 doesn't necessarily promise transferring fast anymore... which sucks
    RickJ's Avatar
    RickJ Posts: 7,762, Reputation: 864
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    #11

    Jun 20, 2006, 04:19 PM
    Hey, never thought of the cable itself. Yes, the hd is usb 2.0. I'll check the cable when I get back to the office.

    With the slow transfer rate from c: to c:, though, I'll have to guess something is amiss elsewhere, too...
    Tommyp!972's Avatar
    Tommyp!972 Posts: 300, Reputation: 36
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    #12

    Jun 21, 2006, 12:28 AM
    If you have slow trasnfer from :c>:c then that's another issue...
    To me it sounds like you got some major cpu robbing program running in the background...

    How much memory is installed on your system?is spyware running in background?is there a disk defrag program running?what programs are running when you ctrl-alt-del?
    When the last time you defragged and did cleanup?

    I'm thinking you might have a spyware issue personally because those have been known to slow a computer to a crawl when doing anything..

    My suggestions
    Do a spyware check
    Do a defrag and cleanup
    Do a antivirus check
    Drag and drop instead of copy and paste(for some weird reason mine transfers faster if I drag instead of cut)
    Check version of USB 2.0 equipment
    Transfer in safe mode if possible
    Get the newest drivers for USB 2.0 card
    Make sure all features on USB addon card are double checked

    I'm tapped... good luck hopefully you get running at the right speed
    StuMegu's Avatar
    StuMegu Posts: 576, Reputation: 64
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    #13

    Jun 21, 2006, 01:38 AM
    I have used this program quite recently http://www.iobit.com/WindowsCare.htm I didn't let it mess around with the services but there is a restore function anyway, seems to help speed up some settings!

    Also, I would look at your IDE controller driver and update if possible. Also have a look at event viewer to see if there are any error messages that might look suspicious.

    By the way, I didn't get the latest notification on this thread after my last post - had to find it myself!
    RickJ's Avatar
    RickJ Posts: 7,762, Reputation: 864
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    #14

    Jun 21, 2006, 07:34 AM
    Tommy: I'm virus, spyware and fragmentation free. My testing is with no other apps running. With cntrl-alt-delete nothing showing under Apps, but a whole list of stuff showing under Processes...

    In double checking the drivers for the USB 2.0 card, Windows tells me they can't find a better driver.

    I'm assuming that the USB card is the "USB 2.0 Root Hub" shown below. Is that correct?

    Stu: Thanks, I'll try the WindowsCare app to see what it shows... and maybe even try a couple of the different "tune up" apps I see at download.com, too.
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    NeedKarma's Avatar
    NeedKarma Posts: 10,635, Reputation: 1706
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    #15

    Jun 21, 2006, 07:38 AM
    Try booting into Safe Mode and doing C: to C: transfers to see if the speed is better - if yes then you do have some CPU robbing processes running when normal booting.
    RickJ's Avatar
    RickJ Posts: 7,762, Reputation: 864
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    #16

    Jun 21, 2006, 08:05 AM
    Clearly I have issues. Transferring this 663MB folder (in Safe Mode) from My Docs to C: took 9 min 15 seconds.

    Will have to see what WindowsCare, et al turns up.
    Northwind_Dagas's Avatar
    Northwind_Dagas Posts: 348, Reputation: 83
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    #17

    Jun 21, 2006, 08:49 AM
    I do not think copying files from C to C is going to show your best performance. Similar to before when I stated doing hard drive functions during a copy will cause it to be slower, the same thing is happening when you copy files on the drive to another location on the same drive.

    The hard drive head is moving back and forth from where the data is and where the data is being copied to.

    You will find the best performance copying between two hard disk on separate IDE channels. I do not think your C to C copy will give any kind of indication as to what you should expect to see when you copy to your external USB drive.
    RickJ's Avatar
    RickJ Posts: 7,762, Reputation: 864
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    #18

    Jun 21, 2006, 09:21 AM
    Y'know, I was wondering about that as I recognized that the copy from my computer to the external HD went a lot faster (albiet too slow for usb2) than the copy from c to c.

    I downloaded 2 "optimization" utilities:
    TuneUpUtilities 2006 and Advanced Windows Care.

    I ran the analyzer for AWC and it found 48 "problems". I then ran the analyzer for TUU and it found a couple thousand line items... so I ran the "Repair" function on it.

    ... then I re-ran the AWC analyzer and it found the same 48 "problems".

    ... so is "optimal performance" just an opinion? Seems very odd that AWC would show no change after such a drastic "optimization" by another far more intensive utility.

    Oh well, still doing some playing around, then will re-try my test copies from my local HD to an external.
    StuMegu's Avatar
    StuMegu Posts: 576, Reputation: 64
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    #19

    Jun 21, 2006, 09:29 AM
    I agree that the c to c copy is not the optimal performance you can get, however it does highlight the failing. My computer will copy 690Mb in about 35 seconds from c to c, Ricks is taking at least ten times longer than this therefore there is a problem with data transfer.

    Probably the time to transfer data between c and usb2 is slightly more quick than c to c. That is not the point however, we are trying to identify the bottleneck in the system and it is higlighted with this c to c test.

    As far as the two optimisers go, they must be diagnosing different things so yes I suppose optimisation is in the eye of the developer!

    Rick, I would also test your ram and hard disk on this system. Did you notice anything funny in the event viewer?
    RickJ's Avatar
    RickJ Posts: 7,762, Reputation: 864
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    #20

    Jun 21, 2006, 09:35 AM
    I do not see anything called Event Viewer in Advanced Windows Care.

    Are you referring to the page showing the summary of the problems it found?

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