Copying over network slow windows 7




















Privacy policy. This article helps administrators to diagnose and resolve the issue of slow file copy in your organization. On the file server that hosts the shared folder, copy the file to its local hard disk. If the file-copying speed is unusually low much slower than average speed , try to update the driver for your storage. If the issue still occurs, contact the driver manufacturer for further troubleshooting. If the speed is normal, use another client computer to copy the files from or to the shared folder.

Let's verify the kind of the shared folder. To do so, open the properties of the shared folder. Let's determine whether the problem is caused by the DFS path. Then, you can check whether the issue still occurs.

This step can help you determine whether the problem is caused by the DFS path. If it is still slow when you use the UNC path, see slow performance when you copy a single file, a folder, or multiple files. Details is what you can post!! Like I thought I clearly stated your wireless to wireless so you cutting your bandwidth in half.. So what do you think is slow??? And at what speed???? What do you think you should be seeing? So What do you feel it should be?

How can I agree with you or point out issues in your logic if you wont even post what speeds your seeing? How can anyone expect to get legitimate answers to a question about your network is slow when you have not even given us the details of your network be it A, B, G or N nor what speeds your seeing..

So how and the F can anyone know if what speeds you are seeing are slow, fast,???? It well might just be the limit of wireless we don't freaking know -- since he has not given us clue freaking one to what he thinks is slow.. But for all we know he thinks that 80MBps is slow???

He has not stated what speeds he is seeing, nor what wireless he is even connected at -- for all we know its a B network? The problem is 1 WiFi rarely connects at fullspeed and the packet size it utilizes can very greatly from second to second, and then 2 on top of that a lot of hardware is built pretty cheaply and can't even transfer at full speeds regardless of connection rate anyway.

Check the WiFi packet sizes being transmitted to know what your threshold is. If you're running a G network and all clients are connected as G, your client might report a connect rate of 54Mbps but realistically only expect a Mbps transfer rate capacity for all clients to share.

In a set up where doing WiFi to WiFi transfers on an infustructure set up, the data I believe might even be transmitted TWICE for both up to the router to be processed and then again to the client this is because wireless clients data is designed for be kept separate from one another and not interceptable, at least with WPA2 encryption - correct me in case there's a condition I'm not aware of , basically halving bandwidth.

If you have really powerful hardware then this number might be quite a bit higher, upto Mbps total 60Mbps in each direction for N networks with a high-end access-point, good WiFi adapter and solid 2x2MIMO Mbps reception. And 7 is slower.. Where does it hurt? How did it feel like before, and how does it feel now? Please feel free to post whatever you feel should be posted to be able to get some info we can work with..

And to be honest I find it unlikely you could ever really see that in the real world on mbit network.. Which there is going to be overhead, quite a bit of it to be honest.. On a mbit wired connecting using very fast cpu, disk, nics, etc. I would say you should be able to get and sustain close to But 12, I don't think so to be honest not at mbit.

Now if your on a mbit network gig then 12 is SLOW! You should be seeing well over 20 closer to 30 with even the cheapest of machines and hdds and network cards.. As you can see I was got over 80MBps doing a file copy from one machine to another.. If your at mbit wired connection and your seeing 12 thats pretty slow. And to be honest I don't feel its possible on a mbit network to see that -- so you must be on wired gig?

Ok so now we know your connected at G speeds.. So what speeds are you seeing?? Do a simple file copy test and time it.. And we can tell you if its fast or slow for a wireless G connection. How long does yours take? I would say it is most likely his wireless in some form. That being said, do not doubt BudMans' words, I am sure he can be wrong, but he has answered my questions extremely accurately in the past the most recent involved networking as well to the point that I found out it was my fault for what was happening, not my networking hardware and not the software I was running.

Until you prove him wrong on something, it is safe to assume what he is saying is accurate, he definitely knows things. I assume he is wireless to wireless from his statements since he says the clients are next to each other and the router is below them - from this I assume both wireless - but maybe he has a wire ran to one of them?. What we did not know is what wireless until now was it A,B,G,N? Nor do have any idea what his wireless speeds are that he believes are slow are at.

So far all we have been able to put together is he is wireless to wireless, and now we know atleast one of the clients is connecting at G. Once we know what speeds he is seeing on this wireless to wireless transfer we can tell him if slow or normal. As to his 18GB in 25 minutes that works out to 12MBps -- which I don't believe is even possible on a mbit network, so would have to assume that he has wired gig -- therefore that 12MBps is SLOW for wired mbit network.

As you can see in screenshot, theres' a 1. Most likely wont work if you just select 1Gb. It depends on if the hardware at the other end of the cable supports it and if it was on auto neg then Im guessing it negotiated mb for a reason ;.

S I love threads like these when some idiot posts a question who clearly has no idea and and is ignorant because its "technologys" fault and then gets shot down by someone. Usually BudMan :D.

You could have 10GB adapters - not going to do you any good if your switch is mbit? To run gig speeds you need a gig switch to connect too, or you would have to be connecting your 2 machines network cards directly together. So how could you complain that your windows 7 to windows 7 file copies are slow.. If not, please move files to the network share folder and try again. Click "Select a network location" to add a network path. Tips : to sync files in real time, please upgrade to Professional edition or higher.

Just make sure the destination partition is formatted with NTFS file system. When you get problems copying large files over network in Windows, you can try a different tool instead of Windows built-in utility. It is also embeds with backup and clone feature to protect Windows or upgrade old hard drives. Go for it and have a try. Problems Copying Large Files over Network Two most common problems of copying large files from network would be operation failed or slow transmission speed.

Bad network connection. This would be the main reason for copying large files over network slow. Step 1. Now, make sure the other computer is able to access the share folder.

Step 2. Wait for the process to complete.



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