its important to remember, write caching is a bit like covering your car dash with a sign that says 100mph files are stored in ram as a buffer and transfer continues in the background at the normal speed. its not a bad option tho just remember to eject drives
Thanks, do yu have a video to explain the things like : allocations" and so on I have no idea what I am supposed to do/what is best for my drives ( I do lots f transfers daily ) I need to optimize things/ make the fastest it can be.
not working for me. New USB stick 3.2 gen 1, formatted to NTFS, Copying one movie 3.8GB from SSD drive, speed is is at 8mb/s. Change policies makes no difference, nor does change allocation size.
same bro i formated it as flash drive and the i formatted it normal pendrive but before flash drive it shows speed of 40 MB write speed but after I formated it shows only 15 to 10 mbs speed
I don't think that'll actually boost the speed. Probably it'll only make the copy window close faster. When you click "safely remove USB device", that time you saved will probably show up again, to flush the cache (i.e., actually writing the data).
There is no "policies" to select after activating "properties" for any of my drives, including the external USB drive . . . all these instructions seem to repeat the same thing, go to policies, but it doesn't seem to exist here, Windows 10.
I've ran into that for years. My WD 3tb mechanical drive did it. I got it in 2011 as external, eventually took it apart and put it internal. But last week got a 4tb SATA SSD to replace it. I have 1tb WD Black NVMe for "C" and 1tb WD Blue NVMe for extra. None of these do it. Sorry, I rambling. But I think it's the memory cache inside the drive.
Simple way of doing this is to enable pagefile on a spare ssd for best performance lol I use 64GB SSD and I set the minimum and max the same value to use 60GB for pagefile and windows boot faster too
1 и 3 совет не имеют смысла, ибо часто оборудование требует именно формат FAT32 и с архивами не работает. 2 совет и вовсе вредный самообман, ибо скорость по факту не меняется, а передача данных продолжается в фоновом режиме.