Hard Drive Speed Rapidly Decreasing.

Bomster

New member
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18
Hi,

I run my computer off an SSD.

But I have 2 Samsung 2TB drives for storage.

I regularly have to transfer filed from one 2TB drive to the other. Until not it has always been a fairly speedy process.

The problem I am having:

I am transferring a large file (5GBish) and for the first 5/10 seconds it transfers between 120 MB/sec - 150 MB/sec, but after that it suddenly starts slowing down, until about a minute later it's sitting at around 20 MB/sec.

I'm sure this never happened before? What is going on?

See pic for example:

1D79e
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64
CPU
Intel i5 3570K
Motherboard
Z77-D3H
Memory
16GB Corsair Vengeance
Graphics Card(s)
MSi HD 6850 OC
Monitor(s) Displays
24" Dell
Hard Drives
128GB Crucial M4 SSD
2 x 2TB Samsung F4
PSU
Cooler Master M600
Case
Zalman Z9+
Cooling
Cooler Master Hyper 212 EVO
Keyboard
Apple Wired Keyboard
Internet Speed
15:1
Maybe there are many files which is small enough to decrease your transfer rate .
 

My Computer

OS
Ultimate 32bit
Cooling
Electric Fan
Internet Speed
Slow as a TURTLE
Yeah, single 6-8GB files.
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64
CPU
Intel i5 3570K
Motherboard
Z77-D3H
Memory
16GB Corsair Vengeance
Graphics Card(s)
MSi HD 6850 OC
Monitor(s) Displays
24" Dell
Hard Drives
128GB Crucial M4 SSD
2 x 2TB Samsung F4
PSU
Cooler Master M600
Case
Zalman Z9+
Cooling
Cooler Master Hyper 212 EVO
Keyboard
Apple Wired Keyboard
Internet Speed
15:1
Assuming your hard drives are formatted with NTFS (standard), I'd say it's normal.

File transfers to NTFS drives are cached, they appear to go faster in copy-paste as the stuff is actually loaded to RAM while it is waiting to be written in the HDD, the speed of this is higher. For small files the trick can fool the user as the process says it has finished the copy well before it has actually written everything to disk. This is an issue for USB drives formatted with NTFS (mainly hard drives, flash drives and SD cards are formatted with FAT32 or exFAT), as it tricks the user into thinking he can disconnect the drive while it is still writing (causing data loss).

With big files, this kind of caching isn't particularly useful as the transfer speed is the same regardless, so the shown speed decreases until it eventually matches the actual transfer speed.
Around 20 MB/s is normal transfer speed for a HDD (the fact the files come from a SDD is irrelevant, the HDD cannot write faster than that anyway).

If you use third-party file transfer software like FastCopy, you will see actual file transfer speed since the beginning, again around 20 MB/s, as such performance-optimized programs cache only a few dozen MB at a time, and only if actually advantageous to do so (like when you are copying files inside the same hard drive).
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
custom built
OS
Win 7 Pro 64-bit 7601
CPU
AMD Phenom 9650 QuadCore, revision DR-B3
Motherboard
ASUS M4A78
Memory
5 GB yes I run 2x 2GB and 1x 1GB, different brand, spank me.
Graphics Card(s)
NVIDIA GeForce 9800 GT 512 Mb, unknown manufacturer.
Sound Card
Crappy Realtek Integrated Audio
Monitor(s) Displays
Fujitsu Siemens P19-3P
Screen Resolution
1280 x 1024 x 32 bits @ 60 Hz Oh yeah, 4:3 rocks!
Hard Drives
(1) MAXTOR S TM3320613AS SATA Disk Device (2) STM35004 18AS SATA Disk Device (3) TOSHIBA USB 2.5"-HDD
PSU
whatever, around 450w
Case
Scavenged from old company PC, 10+ years old
Cooling
CPU fan, GPU fan, case fan, nothing fancy
Keyboard
Microsoft, PS/2, white.
Mouse
Optical, logitec.
Internet Speed
effective max speeds: 70-ish kB/s down 30-ish kB/s up
Antivirus
Avira, free edition.
Browser
Firefox with FXChrome to make it look like Google Chrome :P
Other Info
Was discarded by previous owner due to "horrible performance".
Was running Win Xp from a IDE drive. Yeah. Was a pain.
SATA II drive and Win7 and it zips away! Yay!
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