D-Link Forums
The Graveyard - Products No Longer Supported => D-Link Storage => DNS-323 => Topic started by: pinoguin on March 21, 2011, 11:11:23 AM
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Hi,
I just successfully setup my 323 with 2 seagate 1.5TB's, upgraded the firmware to 1.08 and attempted to transfer files...
The maximum transfer speed I'm getting right now is about 1-2mb/s... I am using wireless btw, could this be the bottleneck? I am using an old linksys wrt54g, will upgrading the wireless router solve the issue ?
I could use cables but that would remove the convenience of using my laptop.
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The maximum transfer speed I'm getting right now is about 1-2mb/s... I am using wireless btw, could this be the bottleneck?
BINGO! You hit the nail on the head there.
Upgrading from wireless-g should show some improvement - I would guess double what you're seeing now - so now you get to choose between speed & convenience.
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Looks like it :) thanks for confirming.
I'm not really an expert in routers, I never took notice of speeds until I bought this first NAS of mine. From what I see there are now Wireless-N's (300mbps vs 54mbps?), is that suitable? I am a bit confused with the mbits/mbps difference here, when it says 54mbps in wireless-g's I thought it was in megabytes or something like that, but I ended up with much less :-\
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The short answer is, any non-wired solution is going to be slow. It's the equivalent of using 2 cans and a string.
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Very briefly - wireless connection speeds are purely theoretical, so your 54mbps wireless-g connection will never deliver anything more than 20~25mbps, which translates to 2.5~3 MByte/sec., and a 300mbps wireless-n is unlikely to get you much more than 80mbps.
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I just bought an N router and n N usb stick, got around 6mbytes/sec maximum.
I got really confused with the mbps vs mbytes/sec :-\
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6 MByte/sec on wireless-n is not bad, but you can possibly triple that if you went wired (gigabit) - your choice.
Regarding the mbps/MByte/sec thing - it's 8 bits to a byte, but a good "rule of thumb" is to just divide by ten (rather than eight) - the mbps is more of a data throughput measurement, and also includes some amount of "overhead", stuff like source & destination addresses, CRC checksums, and so on - MByte/sec is more of a file transfer measurement.
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I just bought an N router and n N usb stick, got around 6mbytes/sec maximum.
I got really confused with the mbps vs mbytes/sec :-\
It's really easy if you think of your internet connection speed vs your download speeds. Let's say you have a 24mbps (Mbits/sec) connection. But, how fast can you download? This is measured in MB/sec (MBytes/sec) and is calculated by dividing your connection speed by 8 (1 Byte = 8 bits):
24mbps / 8 = 3MB/sec
Of course, you never get the theoritical maximum, do you? ;)