Bear

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 29, 2016
Messages
128
Hey guys, idk whats going on, but a new install of win10 pro x64 has EXTREMELY slow read/write times on my HGST 3TB drive.
1514502921662.webp

This has only started happening since I reinstalled windows. What is the world is going on?
*nix does NOT have this issue.
stats:

CPU: AMD FX-8350 (Piledriver/Vishera, OR-C0 (Orochi))
4000 MHz (20.00x200.0) @ 4334 MHz (20.00x216.7)
Motherboard: ASUS SABERTOOTH 990FX R2.0
Chipset: AMD 990FX (RD990) + SB920/SB950
Memory: 16384 MBytes @ 577 MHz, 11-11-11-28
- 8192 MB PC12800 DDR3 SDRAM - Mushkin 992110 (997110)
- 8192 MB PC12800 DDR3 SDRAM - Mushkin 992110 (997110)
Graphics: EVGA e-GeForce GTX 550 Ti
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 550 Ti, 1024 MB GDDR5 SDRAM
Drive: HITACHI HUA723030ALA640, 2930.3 GB, Serial ATA 6Gb/s @ 6Gb/s
Drive: WDC WD10JMVW-11AJGS4, 976.7 GB, Serial ATA 3Gb/s @ 3Gb/s <-> USB
Drive: ATAPI iHAS220 6, DVD+R DL
Sound: ATI/AMD SB800/Hudson-1 - High Definition Audio Controller
Sound: NVIDIA GF116 - High Definition Audio Controller
Network: RealTek Semiconductor RTL8168/8111 PCI-E Gigabit Ethernet NIC
OS: Microsoft Windows 10 Professional (x64) Build 16299.125 (1709/RS3)

Trying to zip the attached report while transferring these files resulted in the zip not being created until I paused the transfer.
 


Attachments

Solution
UEFI or not won't make any difference. One thing looking at the picture is that you are copying a large number of presumably smaller files. That alone is going to have a huge impact on performance. I'd wager if you copied a single large file you'd get a much higher throughtput on the write. Sequential writes are much faster than random writes.
Try lowering your FSB back to 200 as fsb overclocks can affect the southbridge and storage controllers.
 


I don't think I changed anything , i'll 'optimize" defaults and put it on turbo in bios ( asus settings ) should that do it?
oh, an could uefi have anything to do with it? I don't think it was using that before this last reinstall
 


ok, reset to optimized changed one setting to D.O.C.P. but couldn't find anything related to FSB. I left it on normal not turbo though.
1514519420922.webp
 


Attachments

  • 26179321_1549965908421482_682762691_o.webp
    26179321_1549965908421482_682762691_o.webp
    1.5 MB · Views: 405
I think turbo on asus overclocks the fsb, try with it off for awhile and see how it goes.
 


whats strange is I didn't have this problem until I reinstalled win10.
Does UEFI vs non make a difference?
Does it matter which sata port is used?
 


Last edited:
hmmm now thats a good question.. I've not added any additional MB drivers.
 


UEFI or not won't make any difference. One thing looking at the picture is that you are copying a large number of presumably smaller files. That alone is going to have a huge impact on performance. I'd wager if you copied a single large file you'd get a much higher throughtput on the write. Sequential writes are much faster than random writes.
 


Solution
ok, but my question goes back to why did I not experience this issue before?
The difference in performance between windows and linux is like a 1930's vw and 2017 Ferrari
 


Windows and Linux write to disk very differently. Windows will cram files together while Linux writes everything spaced much further apart. This is also why Windows has a high degree of fragmentation and Linux doesn't. That fragmentation will further exacerbate the write issue.
 


Back
Top