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Forum Discussion
mesencephalon
Aug 08, 2019Guide
RAX120 router - SSD file transfer slow with 5gbe ethernet connection
Hello everyone, I recently purchased 1. RAX120 AX6000 router (connected to CM1200 cable modem with monoprice CAT8 ethernet cable) 2. 15 feet Monoprice CAT8 ethernet cable connects the RAX120 ro...
- Aug 14, 2019Just to close the topic.
I tested large file transfer on network with another ssd and top speeds are same around 150mb/sec and there was no speed slow down on the way.
I realized that speed slow down problem is related with my current ssd. I tested my current ssd with a direct connection to my computer and shows the same gradual slow down.
As a result, this router is able to provide around 150mb/sec with fastest hard drives without any geadual slow down. If anybody experience gradual slow down during large file transfer, I recommend them to check their hard drives.
avtella
Aug 09, 2019Prodigy
If on a client with an Intel AX200 or 9260ac expect to get around 135-155 MB/s (1,080-1,240 Mbps). I also have a T5 connected to my RAX120 and also a NAS connected to the 5Gbps port. I find that the write speeds (135-155 MB/s are much faster than the reads (75-90 MB/s) which is opposite of the RAX80 where reads are (140-155 MB/s) and writes are (65-70 MB/s). Guess it might down to some SAMBA configuration issue in firmware regarding slower reads on the RAX120.
I wouldn’t expect anywhere near 400 MB/s even wired as I believe it’s peak is 200-250 MB/s for USB storage according to some reviews. You need to realize this is a router and not a high end NAS as it has an ARM Cortex A53 CPU cores and not a high power desktop Intel/AMD x86 or mobile CPU/Chipset.
I wouldn’t expect anywhere near 400 MB/s even wired as I believe it’s peak is 200-250 MB/s for USB storage according to some reviews. You need to realize this is a router and not a high end NAS as it has an ARM Cortex A53 CPU cores and not a high power desktop Intel/AMD x86 or mobile CPU/Chipset.
- avtellaAug 09, 2019ProdigyTo clarify I have a Samsung T5 1 TB SSD connected to the RAX120’s USB port which I used for tests above. My NAS oddly for some reason (connected via a n-base T 2.5/5/10 Gbps capable Netgear SX10 switch) can’t provide much more than a 114 MB/s even though it’s more than powerful enough (Netgear ReadyNAS 524X with an x86 CPU).
- michaelkenwardAug 09, 2019Guru - Experienced User
avtella wrote:
You need to realize this is a router and not a high end NAS as it has an ARM Cortex A53 CPU cores and not a high power desktop Intel/AMD x86 or mobile CPU/Chipset.You can state that one too often.
mesencephalon hasn't fallen into that trap, but a lot of people seem to think that a USB device can deliver Ethernet performance, even though a decent NAS box can cost as much as a router, even without an y drives installed.
- mesencephalonAug 09, 2019GuideTo clarify, if netgear provides two usb 3.0 ports which are capable of 5gbe data speed and 5gbe ethernet port at the same time, I would expect this router to provide that full speed with sufficient cpu power.
I just accept this as marketing falsification for this router then since the speed is not near usb 3.0, even though it is advertised as a usb 3.0 port.
I purchased this router due to existence of 5gbe port and wifi6 features along with usb 3.0 ports on it.- avtellaAug 09, 2019ProdigyUSB 2.0 tops out at real world (not the theoretical) speeds of 35-40 MB/s so with a USB 3.0 port you are still getting much faster than that.
No router on the market from any vendor claims you will reach peak USB 3.0 throughput. Also you assuming that because it has a 5Gbps port for some reason USB storage speed should hit close to 5Gbps. Thing is no vendor associates USB capability to wired speeds. If you want faster speeds you need to connect a good NAS to the 5Gbps port, which is pretty much what is expected. They never made any false claims in this regard.