How can I figure out whether my external USB hard drive is 2.0 or 3.0? I can't find anything on the label. The only thing that looks remotely like an indication of speed is 1.0A, which is next to the voltage on the label. However, I do not believe 1.0A is a speed; I believe the only speeds are 1.1, 2.0 and 3.0. Do manufacturers not print the speeds on the labels?
Here is the hard drive information:
Toshiba DTB310 1TB
P/N HDTB310EK3AA
E329786
An online search appears to indicate it is 3.0. However, I am getting write speeds of only 40 mb/s, whereas 3.0 should be writing at 4.8 Gbits/second according to https://www.seagate.com/support/kb/how- ... -172213en/.
I have it plugged in to a 3.0 USB drive.
Is my external USB hard drive 2.0 or 3.0?
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- SilverLounger
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Is my external USB hard drive 2.0 or 3.0?
Regards,
JMT
JMT
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Re: Is my external USB hard drive 2.0 or 3.0?
This will refer to the current, i.e. 1.0 Amp.
No! The article you linked to states "Up to 4.8 Gbits/sec" - there are a lot of other factors to take into account, some of which are covered in the article.jmt356 wrote: ↑10 Jun 2020, 11:49However, I am getting write speeds of only 40 mb/s, whereas 3.0 should be writing at 4.8 Gbits/second according to https://www.seagate.com/support/kb/how- ... -172213en/.
Leif
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Re: Is my external USB hard drive 2.0 or 3.0?
1) Look at the connector. If it has a blue strip, it's USB 3.0, otherwise it's USB 2.0.
2) In File Explorer, display the Details Pane (from the View tab of the ribbon).
Select the USB drive.
If it's a USB 3.0 drive:
If you connected it to a USB 3.0 port, you'll see 'Connected to USB 3.0'.
If you connected it to a USB 2.0 port, you'll see 'Device can perform faster when connected to USB 3.0'.
Here is a screenshot of what I see when I connect a USB 3.0 drive to a USB 2.0 port:
2) In File Explorer, display the Details Pane (from the View tab of the ribbon).
Select the USB drive.
If it's a USB 3.0 drive:
If you connected it to a USB 3.0 port, you'll see 'Connected to USB 3.0'.
If you connected it to a USB 2.0 port, you'll see 'Device can perform faster when connected to USB 3.0'.
Here is a screenshot of what I see when I connect a USB 3.0 drive to a USB 2.0 port:
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Best wishes,
Hans
Hans
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Re: Is my external USB hard drive 2.0 or 3.0?
Hans: The details pane states “Connected to USB 3.0.” Moreover, the USB port is 3.0.
However, I continue to get very slow speeds. Currently, the speeds are 3 to 10 MB/s. My source disk is a Crucial MX500 3D SATA 2.5” Internal SSD. Both the USB drive and USB port are 3.0, so even if I am not getting 4.8 Gbits/sec, I should at least be getting 100 to 150 MB/s if everything were functioning as it should.
However, I continue to get very slow speeds. Currently, the speeds are 3 to 10 MB/s. My source disk is a Crucial MX500 3D SATA 2.5” Internal SSD. Both the USB drive and USB port are 3.0, so even if I am not getting 4.8 Gbits/sec, I should at least be getting 100 to 150 MB/s if everything were functioning as it should.
Regards,
JMT
JMT
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Re: Is my external USB hard drive 2.0 or 3.0?
I'm not a hardware expert. Perhaps someone else can comment on the speeds that you report.
Best wishes,
Hans
Hans
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Re: Is my external USB hard drive 2.0 or 3.0?
I can't see from the thread whether the connecting cable from the USB external hard drive to the PC's USB 3.0 port is one which has blue USB 3 connectors at each end.
If it's only a USB 2.0 cable, that could explain the somewhat slower speeds you are experiencing.
However, I do large backups nightly on some servers to 4 TB USB external hard drives, and on (rare) occasions the data transfer rates drop from USB 3.0 to USB 2.0 speeds for no obvious reason...
If it's only a USB 2.0 cable, that could explain the somewhat slower speeds you are experiencing.
However, I do large backups nightly on some servers to 4 TB USB external hard drives, and on (rare) occasions the data transfer rates drop from USB 3.0 to USB 2.0 speeds for no obvious reason...
John Gray
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Re: Is my external USB hard drive 2.0 or 3.0?
John Gray: The end of the connecting cable that plugs into my laptop's 3.0 port is blue, but the end that plugs into my USB external drive is not blue.
Regards,
JMT
JMT
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Re: Is my external USB hard drive 2.0 or 3.0?
I looked for the specs for your disk drive, but I couldn't find a spec for maximum transfer speed. I did notice that it is a 5400 RPM drive, which is pretty slow.
How are you testing the drive speed? The quoted figures are generally a guarantee that you will never get a faster data transfer. You will only get close to this limit if you are streaming data using many simultaneous I/O commands that operate in parallel. Things like copying a file using windows explorer are often single threaded and there is a lot of overhead between each data transfer.
How are you testing the drive speed? The quoted figures are generally a guarantee that you will never get a faster data transfer. You will only get close to this limit if you are streaming data using many simultaneous I/O commands that operate in parallel. Things like copying a file using windows explorer are often single threaded and there is a lot of overhead between each data transfer.
StuartR
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Re: Is my external USB hard drive 2.0 or 3.0?
In which case I would try a USB 3.0 cable which has a 'blue' connector at each end (assuming it is has the standard USB A to USB B plugs), to see if you get any improvement.
John Gray
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Re: Is my external USB hard drive 2.0 or 3.0?
You could TRY a new USB cable or another USB Port ( if you have one) but as Stuart said, "the label only lists the max speed not the actual running speed."
Never expect a USB drive ti equal an internal hard wired drive.
Never expect a USB drive ti equal an internal hard wired drive.
BOB
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Re: Is my external USB hard drive 2.0 or 3.0?
John Gray: I own several 3.0 USBs and none of them have blue on the side of the cable that plugs into the USB drive. The side that plugs into the laptop, which looks like the image that Hans posted above, does have blue.
Regards,
JMT
JMT