• February 25, 2025, 07:58:32 AM
  • Welcome, Guest
Please login or register.

Login with username, password and session length
Advanced search  

News:

This Forum Beta is ONLY for registered owners of D-Link products in the USA for which we have created boards at this time.

Author Topic: Transfer Rate Metric  (Read 2964 times)

Conehead

  • Level 1 Member
  • *
  • Posts: 10
Transfer Rate Metric
« on: April 25, 2011, 05:06:04 PM »

I set up my NAS today and am copying over 280 GB of video.  The estimated time was ~8 hrs.

I'm assuming this is on par with everyone else?
« Last Edit: April 25, 2011, 05:08:37 PM by Conehead »
Logged

dcx_badass

  • Level 1 Member
  • *
  • Posts: 19
Re: Transfer Rate Metric
« Reply #1 on: April 26, 2011, 03:49:41 AM »

Took me 29 hours to do about 550GB (1GB connection aswell). So you're doing better than me!

I gave the DNS-323 away in the end due to this.

Saying that I got about 11mb/s from my main PC with jumboframes, but 16mb/s from my server (which replaced the 323, my desktop to server without jumboframes is 65+mb/s) without jumboframes. I found it too inconsistent for me.

Although, the person I have given the DNS-323 to only really uses it to read (the files I put on), and will only be writing to it occasionally so it meets their needs. If you do a lot of big transfers like I would be doing though it's not practical.
Logged

Steve Pitts

  • Level 2 Member
  • **
  • Posts: 68
  • A twelfth man at silly mid on
Re: Transfer Rate Metric
« Reply #2 on: April 27, 2011, 10:50:36 PM »

I'm assuming this is on par with everyone else?
Firstly, don't rely on the predicted timings, what matters is how long it actually takes. Secondly, whether the speeds you are seeing reflect a reasonable rate will depend on the mix of files (in terms of sizes). With large files you could be getting write speeds of 15 to 17.5MB/s (based on my own testing) if the sending device is capable of sustaining that rate (which most PCs of the past several years ought to be - I have a three-year old Dell GX620 that manages very similar speeds to a month-old overclocked i7 beastie)
Logged
Cheers, Steve

Running a DNS-323 Rev. C1 with FW 1.10b5, fun_plug 0.5 and 1 Western Digital WD20EARS-00MVWB0, 4K aligned by 1.10FW, in Standard mode as a single volume