| Other Hardware and Peripherals Other Apple systems and peripherals discussion. |
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![]() Member Since: Feb 06, 2005
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USB 2.0 has a spec raw data rate of 480 Mbit/sec. I have a couple of external USB 2.0 drives and have yet to see anything close to that.
To test this, I ran a backup on my MacBook (using SuperDuper) twice: once using my external firewire enclosure and once using my external USB 2.0 enclosure. Both enclosures contain exactly the same type of hard drive. To back up 55 GB, the firewire enclosure took under an hour; running the same job on the USB 2.0 drive, it ran for an hour and a half and was only about halfway through the job when I stopped it. Go Firewire. You won't regret it. Cheap Date Show: Real people. Real food. Real date. Last edited by caribiner23; 11-16-2006 at 09:18 AM. |
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But firewire externals and enclosures are usually a bit more expensive, but worth it in my opinion. USB is more widely used though. I feel firewire is going the way of the beta max video tape. It was a better quality alternative, but was not as popular as VHS. Computer world is like high school, it's a popularity contest. |
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![]() Member Since: Nov 17, 2006
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usb 2.0 > firewire a
firewire b > usb 2.0 Any external hdd will work at the same speed REGARDLESS of USB2.0 or FirewireA/B simply because there are no 400mb/sec hard drives. (the only variable is the speed of the hdd) I run a 2.5" USB2.0 sata 120gig drive. Black MacBook Intel C2D 2gig DDR2-667 100gig 7200rpm HDD |
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Also, I have this enclosure which has both USB and Firewire ports. Regardless of whether this is connected to a MacBook, iBook, or my PC, the USB side is consistently slower than the firewire side. I wont argue with the concept of the speed limitations of hard drives. I do believe, however, there is an issue with the way USB handles resource contention differently than firewire. My personal experience tells me that Firewire 400, in practice, is faster than USB 2.0. Cheap Date Show: Real people. Real food. Real date. Last edited by caribiner23; 11-17-2006 at 03:33 PM. |
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![]() Member Since: Nov 17, 2006
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Yes, usb and firewire both handle the transfers and resources differently. I cannot speak for my mac but on my PC I dont notice a difference...though I am not running drive testers so its plainly an observation. I do know that extended transfers containing alot of data (while connected via FW800 on my windows machine) results in the machine locking up. This seems to be a known error from what my co-workers are telling me.
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FireWire 800 >> FireWire400 > USB2 >> USB1 FireWire was designed for high, sustained data transfers, like digital video. USB was designed to be a hot-pluggable bus for mice and printers. Speeding up the peak bandwidth of USB to get USB2 doesn't change the fact that it wasn't designed to handle sustained transfers. |
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![]() Member Since: Nov 17, 2006
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When one of the drives is connected to a usb2.0 port we dont have any issues with it completing the entire transfer. Black MacBook Intel C2D 2gig DDR2-667 100gig 7200rpm HDD |
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![]() Member Since: Oct 09, 2006
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![]() Member Since: Nov 17, 2006
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we thought that, but its the same on both machines.
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![]() Member Since: Oct 04, 2006
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Sometimes my firewire doesn't even work correctly, but works faster. When I looked up the speed of firewire and USB, some sources were saying that USB2.0 was faster????? I don't get it. |
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