Incredibly slow file transfer

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  1. Posts : 16
    Windows 10
       #1

    Incredibly slow file transfer


    It starts at around 300MB/s but after a second it drops to 20MB/s. On Windows 7 it was usually around 100MB/s. This is for transferring to second hard drive. It's even slower transferring to USB drive, about 2 MB/s.
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 1
    Windows 10
       #2

    Same issue


    nights said:
    It starts at around 300MB/s but after a second it drops to 20MB/s. On Windows 7 it was usually around 100MB/s. This is for transferring to second hard drive. It's even slower transferring to USB drive, about 2 MB/s.
    Hey man, Im having the same issue as you. everything else is running fine, but im getting extremely low transfer rates across the board. Im getting similar results when transfering files between internal drives with SATA connections as i am with external drives connected through USB. I didnt see any answers on here yet, but I hope someone chimes in.
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 3
    Windows 10 Pro 64-bit
       #3

    Also having this issue. 8 second to 2 minute startup, one or the other at random. Since the OS drive is an SSD I have quite a lot of programs using both drives and it's really been interfering with my productivity.

    The WD 2TB drive that is averaging 13MB/s on read and 70MB/s on write with Crystal Disk Mark. It went through a ~13 hour diagnostic with the manufacturer utility software and came out flying colors. I searched for more comprehensive testing software and tripped over a thread of someone using the same model HDD. At the very least the results should be comparable, but they are not even close:

    Incredibly slow file transfer-comparisonhdd.jpg

    The chipset drivers have been updated with the latest Intel has to no effect.

    My next move is to switch cables and move the drive to another SATA port, but I doubt it will make any difference. After that I'm ready to just wipe the drive and do a clean install.

    It might also be worth noting that my SSD IOPS has been chopped nearly in half since the upgrade:
    Incredibly slow file transfer-ssdbench.jpg

    Keep in mind that this is with Rapid Mode enabled, and I had to use the 4.4-4.7 method of installation/update to get it working, so it might not be connected at all.
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 3
    Windows 10 Pro 64-bit
       #4

    Welp, I was wrong, changing the port had a drastic effect. It isn't near what it should be, but it's serviceable. The OS SSD is now the only drive on the Intel 6Gb/s port(s); it had slight gains on IOPS (not worth showing). After using the Magician benchmark tool quite a bit today, the results seem a little too random to be reliable. The secondary shares the 3Gb/s with a blu-ray drive:

    Incredibly slow file transfer-secondarydriveintel3gbp_s.png

    Incredibly slow file transfer-maghdd_intelsata3gb_s.jpg

    Just for giggles I turned the Marvell controller on (never has been reliable on my board) and tested throughput.

    Incredibly slow file transfer-maghdd_marvellcontroller.jpg

    Something is definitely holding it back, and it's tied to Windows 10 and the particular upgrade path and/or the driver set being used. I'll have to research the symptoms a bit more before I get a good idea as to what is really going on. I also have an HP laptop with a WD secondary drive and an 840Pro OS drive. Now that the desktop secondary drive is on a different port set, it has nearly the same throughput as the laptop secondary drive. A pattern is starting to form. I'm really tempted to do a clean install of the OS. Has anyone encountered this problem after a clean install?
    Last edited by Aeroflux; 03 Sep 2015 at 11:22.
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 1
    windows 10
       #5

    i too have the same problem...


    every usb i have tried external hdd or usb 3.0 pendrive, all slow down to usb 2.0 transfer speed....there is an initial burst speed but the speed soon decreases to about 10 mbps....i am fed up of it....i have a transcend hdd and and same hdd gives constant speed of over 90 mbps on windows 8 or 7...i also tried connecting my laptop and pc both running win 10 pro 64 bit via ethernet cable, both are gigabit ethernet but yet the transfer speed was about 10 mbps-15 mbps...i have all latest drivers and also tried intel rapid storage drivers but all in vein....another problem i have is that windows 10 restarts sometimes instead of shutting down and i have to shut it down again. this windows is the buggiest windows till date
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 1
    Win 10
       #6

    I am having the same problem. I get excellent file transfer speeds on my windows 7 machines but not windows 10. If I transfer a file from my win7 desktop to my win10 desktop its super fast 100+ megabytes per second. If I transfer from my win10 to ANY other device on my network it goes incredibly slow.

    This is transfering from win7 to win10.
    Incredibly slow file transfer-7-10.png

    This is from win10 to win7.
    Incredibly slow file transfer-10-7.png

    Why is it that my windows 10 desktops can receive files at top speeds but can't transfer out?
      My Computer


  7. Posts : 2
    Win 10
       #7

    I had this same problem in windows 7 so I went to windows 10 hoping this problem was fixed but no such luck. I am thinking that the slow speed is because windows is updating the file indexing feature (to allow for fast file name searches) during the copy process and slowing everything to a crawl. Does anyone know how to turn that feature off? - maybe that would help solve the problem.
      My Computer


  8. Posts : 2
    Win 10
       #8

    Indexing may not be the problem - look at this post on how to disable Write-cache Buffer Flushing - this solved my problem but it comes with a concern if power goes out.

    Windows 10 10240 Slow Copy
      My Computer


  9. Posts : 1
    Windows 7 x64
       #9

    Just wanted to point out that I've also noticed Windows 10 USB copying is very slow.

    Prior to Win10 upgrade, on Win7x64 I transfer from my USB 3.0 external drive to internal RAID0 (or to another external USB 3.0 drive) is around 150 MB/s for 8GB filesize. After upgrade to Win10x64, that transfer speed drops down to no more than 80 MB/s (require several reboots). Most of the time transfer speed is 30-50 MB/s. Because of this (and among other app problems), I reinstalled Win7x64 and plan to stay Win7 for until end of support.

    I am not sure if it has something to do with Win7 upgrade to Win10. I have not tried a clean Win10 install....yet.
      My Computer


  10. Posts : 3
    Windows 10 x64
       #10

    I registered just to add to, and follow this thread.

    I'm having the same issues, though not consistently. I am trying to copy roughly 2.5TB of movies from a five disk RAID5 array in a port-multiplier enclosure (via a RocketRAID 2314 card) to a 4TB Seagate USB 3.0 external drive. It would start out around 100MB/s, but then drop to 8-9 MB/s until I canceled the transfer. At first, I thought maybe it was an issue with USB, but further testing showed it was happening across all drives in the system (one SSD, two spinning disks, the two USB 3.0 drives, and the external eSATA RAID array).

    I went through an painstakingly updated all the drivers. I say "painstakingly" because I was able to determine the AMD chipset installer did not install over the older Microsoft USB 3.0 drivers.... so I had to change the hardware controller and hub within the drivers manually. I already had the newest RocketRAID drivers... so not much I could do there. I also double-checked that all the write-caching options were enabled (they were).

    After all that, things changed a little. Sometimes things go fast, sometimes they crawl. I at least having seen the 8-9MB/s transfer again... but things still aren't right:

    - From my RAID array to the USB drive now, I got a speed that fluctuated between 50-80MB/s
    - From my 4TB WD USB 3.0 drive to my 5TB Seagate USB 3.0 drive, I got 150MB/s
    - From one spinning disk to another, an 18GB transfer started at a solid 160MB/s, then dropped to 130MB/s until it was done
    - From a spinning disk to a 5TB x 3 Storage Spaces array (in parity mode), it'll start off fast, then drop to 35MB/s or so

    By biggest concern right now is the horrible read speed I'm getting from my external RAID5 array, which is composed of five 2TB WD Red drives, connected to the PC with a RocketRAID 2314 card that supports port multiplication. I typically get around 150MB/s read speeds from it, and only slightly lower for write speeds. But since installing Windows 10 (clean install), it sucks terribly.

    Transfers to the SS array are the slowest. This *could* be due to parity-related CPU usage, which I can see spike pretty quickly after starting a transfer.... but I don't think so. It is able to maintain a good speed in the 130-140 range before dropping down to 35MB/s. Here is a video of it happening

      My Computer


 

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