Multiple copies very slow

michaeljc70

New member
Local time
3:49 PM
Messages
11
If I multiselect 2 folders and copy them to a destination across the network vs select the same folders separately to copy to the same destinations (2 copies), the time difference is unbelievable. Sometimes I cannot always mutliselect them (different folders). Is there any way to make it copy faster?

My guess is Windows 7 is throttling between the 2 processes making it like 5x as long.

I know I can do one copy, then the next, but sometimes I want it to be done at one time (I'm not sitting there watching it).

I was hoping to avoid batch files as these are 1 time things usually.

I guess I would think Windows is smart enough to know I am doing 2 copies with that same source drive and destination and work it out.
 

My Computer

OS
Win 7 Ultimate
The data transfer speed is set to the network, so what ever your network transfer data rate is, that's what it is. This it do to the hardware of each PC and the router on the network whether wired or wireless.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom built
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate 64 bit
CPU
AMD Phenom II X4 965 Black Edition
Motherboard
Gigabyte GA-MA790X-DS4
Memory
GSkill 4 X 2 GB PC 8500
Graphics Card(s)
XFX Radeon HD 6790 D
Sound Card
On board RealTek HD
Monitor(s) Displays
Dual monitors:Samsung SyncMaster S20B300
Screen Resolution
1600 X 900
Hard Drives
Seagate Barracuda 1TB (primary)
Seagate Barracuda 2 X 320 GB
PSU
Ultra X4 750 watt fully modular
Case
Thermaltake Overseer RX 1 full tower
Cooling
Core-Contact 92 mm CPU Cooler
Keyboard
Logitech G510
Mouse
Razor DeathAdder
Internet Speed
50/5 Mbps UL/DL
Other Info
Optical: Super Muliti DVD burner w/lightscribe, Hauppauge WinTV HVR-1800
The data transfer speed is set to the network, so what ever your network transfer data rate is, that's what it is. This it do to the hardware of each PC and the router on the network whether wired or wireless.

Not true.

Try picking (multi-selecting) 2 large files and copying them somewhere on your network and time it.

Then pick the 1st file, and copy it. Then pick the second file and copy it (at the same time the first copy is going). This method will WAY slower than the prior one.
 

My Computer

OS
Win 7 Ultimate
It varies.

Think of it this way though. A hard drive can only read from one place at a time. If it has to constantly switch from one file (assume little fragmentation) to another, that involves overhead. There is also (I imagine) overhead in Windows switching between the copy processes, but this is probably minimal compared to the hard drive issue.
 

My Computer

OS
Win 7 Ultimate
Back
Top