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#31
@Blaq ... FWIW ...
You can find out which SMB Version/Dialect Win10 is actually using when connecting to your NAS and Other PC's. It requires you have an active connection to Share Folders.
1. Open PowerShell as Admin
2. In File Explorer > Network > Open a shared folder on your NAS and your other Win10 PC
3. In the PowerShell Window run the command get-smbconnection
4. The Dialect is the SMB Version (i.e. mine is using SMBv3 ... Dialect 3.1.1 ... in the example below)
5. Yours should/will probably be SMBv1 (Dialect 1.1.1) for your NAS Shares and SMBv3 (Dialect 3.1.1) for you Win10 PC Shares.
Note:Code:PS C:\WINDOWS\system32> get-smbconnection ServerName ShareName UserName Credential Dialect NumOpens ---------- --------- -------- ---------- ------- -------- 192.168.1.1 ShareDrive EAGLE-HPL\ EAGLE-HPL\ 3.1.1 1 192.168.1.4 TempFiles EAGLE-HPL\ EAGLE-HPL\ 3.1.1 1 192.168.1.4 User EAGLE-HPL\ EAGLE-HPL\ 3.1.1 1 192.168.1.4 www EAGLE-HPL\ EAGLE-HPL\ 3.1.1 1 EAGLE-HPD IPC$ EAGLE-HPL\ EAGLE-HPL\ 3.1.1 EAGLE-HPD TempFiles EAGLE-HPL\ EAGLE-HPL\ 3.1.1 1 EAGLE-HPD User EAGLE-HPL\ EAGLE-HPL\ 3.1.1 7 EAGLE-HPD www EAGLE-HPL\ EAGLE-HPL\ 3.1.1 3 PS C:\WINDOWS\system32>
1. Connected Mapped Network Drives will automatically show since they are active connections. You can tell mine in the above example, because I use Static IPs and Map Network Drives by IP ... You may or may not have mapped network drives.
2. The others using PCNAME are the ones I manually went to in File Explorer > Network > ShareName
3. I've removed my UserName from the above output. You don't need to post your result, but if you do remove your UserName.