I believe that Bakura's HDD is rather slow 5400rpm, and that may also create problems like this slow transfer.
Slow 1394a transfers with HardDrive and DV
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I wouldn't say slow. 7200 RPM only became common not too long ago and anything faster is definitely not normative.Comment
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Well bakura82, I would not be that optimistic. I had one 5400 HDD in my old COMPAQ PC (bought 4 years back) and another 7200 Barracuda HDD which I added later. I transfer a lot from my DV Camcorder to PC and I found that in my old PC transfer rate to the 7200 rpm was better than the 5400 rpm one.Comment
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Well bakura82, I would not be that optimistic. I had one 5400 HDD in my old COMPAQ PC (bought 4 years back) and another 7200 Barracuda HDD which I added later. I transfer a lot from my DV Camcorder to PC and I found that in my old PC transfer rate to the 7200 rpm was better than the 5400 rpm one.Comment
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Your 8 MB/s bottleneck needs clarification, from your first post you have failed to
grasp the issues and shown little understanding of the fundamental concepts of computing.
Do a simple test, take a large file, transfer from your internal hard drive to your external one, something about a gig in size, time the transfer.Comment
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Anyway...
You are right, I should time it myself because I am relying on the value that Windows Vista reported to me (8 MB/s) and while this new OS is certainly more shiney, it doesn't mean it's file transfer calculations are any better than they have been since Win98.Comment
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Assuming the following standards:
1,048,576 bytes equals 1 MB
== Test 1 ==================================
As reported by Vista (on laptop):
Size : 7.49 GB (8,052,813,824 bytes)
On Disk: 7.49 GB (8,052,994,048 bytes)
Contains: 114 Files
Highest Transfer Rate according to Vista averages
9.93 MB/s
My Timed Value: 13:03 = 13.05 minutes = 783 seconds
My Calcs: 8,052,813,824 bytes / 783 s = 10,284,564.27 B/s = [ 9.81 MB/s ]
I guess Vista was fairly accurate on this measurement after all.
== Test 2 ==================================
As reported by Vista (on laptop):
Size : 0.99 GB (1,073,565,696 bytes)
On Disk: 0.99 GB (1,073,565,696 bytes)
Contains: 1 File
Highest Transfer Rate according to Vista averages
9.48
My Timed Value: 1:44 = 1.73 minutes = 103.8 seconds
My Calcs: 1,073,565,696 bytes / 103.8 s = 10,342,636.76 B/s = [ 9.86 MB/s ]
So there you have it. I stepped away from my laptop and this was the ONLY thing running. I received 9.81 MB/s for 114 files at once and then 9.86 MB/s for 1 file.
Seeing as how I have "shown little understanding of the fundamental concepts of computing" and more than likely simple mathematics's as well, I am sure I made a mistake. If would point that out, I would gladly correct for you.
Now, again, I am not genius, but I am fairly certain that 9.86 MB/s is less than the 23 MB/s that you indicated as an average earlier. If we use the RPM theory, then again, 9.86 MB/s is less than 17.25 MB/s (assuming 75% of the transfer speed).
So again I ask, does anyone have any thoughts as to why my transfer speeds are slow?
Thank you.Comment
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it's solely? vista's fault, they have released patch(s) for that
even your 5400 rpm drive should maintain 20-25 MB/s sustained transfers, unless it's a dinosaur
that's good science you did, the calculator and watch are real measurements
rpm's in themselves are not a good indicator of drive performance, I have a 10K drive that's the first scuzzi adapted to sata(raptor), newer sata 7200 drives do better
your first post:
I have noticed that when I transfer files to my average speed (5400 RPM) harddrive in Vista, I can't transfer faster than 8MB/s. Considering that 1394a can transfer at 400Mb/s, that's terrible!
In terms of doing video editing, I only have a laptop and I am forced to capture video to my external hardrive. This is painstaking though. What am I missing? How can I make this faster?
Thank your you input folks.
Slow 1394a transfers with HardDrive and DV
hence the confusion
also refering to sata speeds as 150MB/s, it takes 4 drives striped to attain those speeds
your last test showed that the bottleneck of 8MB/s a second was not related to DV captureLast edited by Chewy; 27 Oct 2007, 12:22 AM.Comment
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How to:
Open controlpanel, open administration, open services, and right click Windows Search and click properties. Then choose deactivated, and reboot.
Press Windows Key +R
type cmd
Click Okay (this opens command prompt)
Type services.msc
Press the Enter key
Press Continue at the User Account Control Screen
The services management console will open
Scroll down to the Windows Search entry
Right Click Windows Search and select Properties
Click Stop
Select Disabled from the Startup type dropdown
Click Ok
Close the services management consoleComment
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I believe that is the case. I read something about it but never found that link again. The only patch I find when I search is for XP.[/quote]
yeah, I stated that earlier. I highly doubt it's simply a matter of a 25% speed difference. There are obviously other factors that are key (which I am mostly ignorant of at the moment). I just gave the figure as an hypothetical example.
As for my posts, sorry if I wasn't clear. The internet tends to be a medium that often leads people to misunderstanding.
Anyway...
Do you really think the indexer is the problem? I don't. To my understanding, it's supposed to slow and eventually stop indexing with increased CPU usage. Personally, I like the indexer. When you decide to make the jump (I don't recommended until SP2), you will see the benefit.
If MS says so though somewhere, I guess I will have to consider disabling it. Were did you read about the problem in Vista? I can't seem to find a knowledge base article or anything on this topic -- "specifically, slow firewire transfer in Vista".
Trust me, if I had a chioce, I would have opted out. I wanted a top of the line laptop though. My boxes at home use XP and variants of Linux.Comment
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those quotes about fixing it came from the MS technet forum and the longest running thread on the problem
very interesting read, especially at the end, my drive to drive transfers of 4+ gigs only take 2 minutesComment
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