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Occasional Contributor
leila
Posts: 5
Registered: ‎03-03-2011
0

Ethernet transfer speed?

I am trying to decide between this or live plus.

 

Main thing that makes me want this one is internal storage and the fact that it comes with a gigabit port.

What i want to know is if it is capable of getting high transfer rates, say to at least 50-60mb's per second?

 

Thanks.

Regular Visitor
vvkvvk
Posts: 4
Registered: ‎03-05-2011
0

Re: Ethernet transfer speed?

Sadly, not on my home network. I cannot get more than 9.2 Mb/sec when transferring files from the pc to the wd tv live hub. Both the pc and wd tv live hub are connected to a  WNDR3700  router using gigabit ethernet cables ...

Frequent Advisor
lemonkid
Posts: 65
Registered: ‎02-19-2011
0

Re: Ethernet transfer speed?

I can reach transfer speeds of around 2.3 Mbyte/second thats around 13.8 Mbits/s on a connection where I can reach 60Mbits/s esily So it is not real slow but also not real fast......

Visitor
fishytale
Posts: 2
Registered: ‎03-03-2011
0

Re: Ethernet transfer speed?

I can get a grand total of 2.4mb per second agonisingly slow

Frequent Visitor
alaskanboi
Posts: 3
Registered: ‎03-09-2011
0

Re: Ethernet transfer speed?

[ Edited ]

I get 6-7 MB (48 - 56 Mbit) using my 10/100 connection while streaming video/music.  I have cat 6 waiting to be ran, but been lazy about it.  I have no problems streaming blu-ray on this setup.  I'll put in the effort to rewire my office this weekend, see if I get any better speeds.

Honored Contributor
TonyPh12345
Posts: 17,822
Registered: ‎01-11-2010
0

Re: Ethernet transfer speed?

 


alaskanboi wrote:

I get 6-7 MB (48 - 56 Mbit) using my 10/100 connection while streaming video/music.  I have cat 6 waiting to be ran, but been lazy about it.  I have no problems streaming blu-ray on this setup.  I'll put in the effort to rewire my office this weekend, see if I get any better speeds.


 

You won't ... If your current cable is Cat 5 and error-free, cat 6 just wasted your money... :smileyhappy:
===Live SMP / Live Hub x2 / Live+ / Live x2 / 24 TBytes of QNAP + WD NAS ===
Frequent Visitor
alaskanboi
Posts: 3
Registered: ‎03-09-2011
0

Re: Ethernet transfer speed?

Shared 100 meg connection going to dedicated gig connections... should see a gain to a point where the HDD speeds are the factor, not ethernet. And getting a spool of cat 6 was free..  All i gotta do is wall fish the other outlets in and I'm done...

 

A single blu ray stream will probably stay the same.. however transfer speeds should increase

Honored Contributor
TonyPh12345
Posts: 17,822
Registered: ‎01-11-2010
0

Re: Ethernet transfer speed?

[ Edited ]

You may still not need to worry about the cable.

 

Though the "Category 5" certification was deprecated some time ago (thus requiring Gigabit Ethernet to use Cat5e or better) *most* of the time Cat5 works just fine.

 

Especially in the home environment where cable lengths are short.  

 

The Cat5e spec is good to 100 meters, so if you're living in a mansion, it might still apply.   :smileyhappy:

===Live SMP / Live Hub x2 / Live+ / Live x2 / 24 TBytes of QNAP + WD NAS ===
Frequent Advisor
chip_r
Posts: 35
Registered: ‎02-24-2011
0

Re: Ethernet transfer speed?

Similar to wkwk, I get about 9-10Mbytes/sec with a gigabit NIC in my PC to the player through a gigabit switch. I'm using Cat-5e cables @around 100'. Shorter gigabit runs work error free without using Cat-6 so you might want to upgrade your switches and NICs before pulling the cable. Fishing cable can be a pain. As a note, Cat 5 (no e) doesn't fly well at all for gigabit connections as it's way below spec.

 

In comparison, transfers from my PC to a DLink DNS-323 NAS I have are around 25Mbytes/sec. The problem is NAS boxes (and this player is one) have small embedded CPUs that are running an OS, user interface, and network interface at the same time.  You'll max out that little CPU long before the HDD or network is the bottleneck.

 

The ethernet speeds are similar to a lower-end NAS and that's expected. Think about it this way, WD picked a mix of hardware and software to make the experience usable for most people as a network player. It isn't a PS3, XBOX, or home-grown media center PC and nor is it priced that way. It's small, quiet, low (electrical) power, integrates well many TV setups so it  satisfies most  player needs without too much hassle. If you need a higher-end setup, go for it.

 

What a lot of techie people lose sight of is that most products are made for the masses, not for the over-clocking crowd :smileysurprised: IMO, the hub seems to be about right for many but not all people.

Frequent Advisor
lemonkid
Posts: 65
Registered: ‎02-19-2011
0

Re: Ethernet transfer speed?

Wel I am working with those cat 5 and other novelties which are already outdates by cat 6. But still slow... other things tested over the same connection go fast it must be the hub... or... the hub ghost..... that slow things down.

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