Solved External hard drive to ethernet switch

Remember there is a difference between MB/s and Mb/s - make sure you're comparing apples to apples

See here for explanation
Dammit Dave, my brain can only take in a finite daily amount of new information! For the record, it is Mbps. When I change the units to MBps(Mega-Bytes), it is 13.93/7.48 Write/Read respectively.
 
Dammit Dave, my brain can only take in a finite daily amount of new information! For the record, it is Mbps. When I change the units to MBps(Mega-Bytes), it is 13.93/7.48 Write/Read respectively.
I thought Reads were always faster than Writes?
 
You got me interested, as I have never noticed any real speed issues on my NAS box:
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Guess I picked the wrong box...those numbers are impressive.

I guess it could be the amount of traffic on my network too. We have 5 computers, and then there are the 3 televisions and a butt-ton of WiFi devices - I'm not sure if they have any effect or not.
 
I re-ran them and got even faster results with bigger packet sizes!
 
In fairness it's plugged into the same switch as my laptop... #TryingNotToUpsetNG#
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Good point. I will move mine to the same switch and see what that changes...#MintyIsABraggart#,#Trying-Not-To-Be-A-CandyAss#
 
Wow. Did you notice that your Write speed is faster as well?
 
this may have something to do with it


coax - 10 Mbps
Cat6 - up to 1 Gbps
Cat8 - up to 10 Gbps
So with that, I would have to bring the signal into the house into a central switch and then connect each device to it. Right now each computer connects to a MoCA "brick" (cable in. ethernet out). From what the article says, these bricks are causing bottle necks.
 
I was actually reading that it is the cable itself which is the bottleneck. From what you said you have coax cable - fine for TV not so fine for data transfer (at least in the UK).

Suggest buy a cat6 (or better) patch lead long enough for your purposes connect the two devices and see what you get. Note sometimes you need to use what used to be called a crossover cable where one end of a twisted pair is connected the other way round.

Others have suggested elsewhere using a link box, plugged into your mains socket and providing a rj45 outlet you can connect to your device. You would need one for each device although some of these may have multiple outlets. Not a recommendation as I don't use them but something like this

 
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