- FIREWIRE 800 TO USB 3 CONNECTOR MAC OS X
- FIREWIRE 800 TO USB 3 CONNECTOR DRIVER
- FIREWIRE 800 TO USB 3 CONNECTOR FULL
gavbon86: RT Offering boost speeds of up to 5.5 GHz, Intel touts its special edition Core i9-12900KS as being the fastest CPU on the mark….I wrote about this issue while talking about 6Gbps SATA controllers on Intel motherboards here, but the same problem documented in that article applies to USB 3.0. In these cases you’ll still get better than USB 2.0 performance but you may not see the same numbers I got here. I was using a Gigabyte X58A-UD5, but many other boards dangle the USB 3 controller off of a single PCIe x1 lane running at 250MB/s (250MB/s each direction). Most mainstream motherboards with an Intel chipset don’t give USB 3 controllers enough bandwidth to deliver these sorts of results. There is one more stipulation that I must bring up. What this tells us is that, at least compared to FireWire 800 on a Mac Pro, the USB 3 connection in Windows is still the quickest way to write to the drive.
FIREWIRE 800 TO USB 3 CONNECTOR DRIVER
Note that performance was identical regardless of whether I was using Paragon’s NTFS driver or I formatted the drive in OS X’s native HFS+ file format. Copying files to the drive manually I saw very similar numbers over FireWire 800 (53MB/s writes, 78MB/s reads). USB 2.0 performance was aroun 15 - 17MB/s while FireWire 800 managed 47.6MB/s for sequential writes and 75MB/s for sequential reads. All of these are written via the filesystem but are uncached: On the Mac, without Iometer I had to resort to XBench for the performance numbers. It works in both USB 2.0 and USB 3.0 ports. The USB 3.0 cable that ships with the GoFlex Desk USB 3.0 dock.
Random performance remained unchanged regardless of what interface I used. The SATA to USB 3.0 bridge does some additional buffering that may be the cause of the improved performance here. I actually got better performance over USB 3.0 than I did with the drive connected via SATA at around 150MB/s for sequential reads/writes. The only issue is you need to make sure you don't lose the USB 3.0 cable since the drive-end of it is not backwards compatible. It's a shame that USB 3.0 isn't more ubiquitous because this is great performance not to mention that you get backwards compatibility with USB 2.0 systems. USB 3.0 performance is just awesome, the drive performs just like an internal hard drive. That’s 240Mbps, about half of the USB 2.0 spec maximum. Over USB 2.0 I got around 30MB/s for sequential reads/writes. USB 2.0 and USB 3.0 docks (left and right)
FIREWIRE 800 TO USB 3 CONNECTOR FULL
The full results are below, but I’ll give you the gist of it here.
FIREWIRE 800 TO USB 3 CONNECTOR MAC OS X
Seagate sent all three docks for review and I benchmarked the 3TB GoFlex Desk under both Windows 7 and Mac OS X 10.6.4 to get an idea for its performance. The On-The-Go "Add your own Drive" Kit enclosure is ready to accept your own 2.5" SATA Hard Drive or SSD.USB 2.0, 3.0 and FireWire 800 Performance The built-in aluminium heatsink underneath the drive and passthrough cooling vents on the top of the case work in tandem to provide optimum results.
The OWC Mercury On-The-Go's fan-less design offers near silent operation while still keeping your drive cool. The OWC Mercury On-The-Go features the latest in performance with an Oxford combination FireWire and USB chipset creating one perfectly integrated storage solution. The OWC Mercury On-The-Go Pro USB 3.0 & 2.0 / FireWire 800 (FireWire 400 Backwards Compatible) Enclosure Kit packs an incredible punch into a 88.9mm x 139.7mm x 25.4mm 190g package! Enclosure for 2.5" HDD or SSD Drive with a FireWire 800 and USB 3.0 port.