My laptop is a Dell Inspiron 7591 2n1, with a USB-A port supporting USB 3.1 Gen 1 and a USB-C/Thunderbolt 3 port supporting USB 3.1 Gen 2. I think that means the USB-A support should support speeds to 5Gbps and the USB-C should support up to 10 Gbps. Internally there is a M.2 NVME Windows 11 system drive, and an internal SATA drive (Western Digital WDS500G2B0A WD Blue 3D NAND Internal SSD 2.5 Inch SATA, 500 GB).
I'm testing an external Kingston XS1000 1TB SSD USB 3.2 Gen 2 Portable drive.
Here are the CrystalDiskMark results using the supplied usb-c cable:
Connected to UBS-C (USB 3.1 Gen2 / Thunderbolt 3 port)
Connected to UBS-A (USB 3.1 Gen1 port)
The SEQ Q8T1 results are as expected, with the connection via USB-C being as per the stated speeds for this SSD drive, and the connection via USB-A being just under half that.
What surprises me is the RND Q1T1 results. This drive is much faster on this benchmark via the slower USB-A port.
I'm getting much lower speeds in real-life file writes - probably as expected, but at least USB-C is always faster than USB-A.
However, for copying a large number of small files, the difference between USB-A and USB-C is small, and my Kingston XS-1000 is much slower for small files than my internal SATA SSD. So, this still begs the question, why is this Kingston XS1000 handling small files so unexpectedly slowly.
Here's the results of my real life tests (in Windows 11 64 bit):
16.8Gb multiple small files (4413 photos)
External SATA 151 Mb/s (via USB-C)
External SATA 135 Mb/s (via USB-A)
Internal SATA 226 Mb/s
24.8Gb one very large file
External SATA 430 Mb/s (via USB-C)
External SATA 306 Mb/s (via USB-A)
Internal SATA 330 Mb/s
15Gb (4 large files)
External SATA 415 Mb/s (via USB-C)
External SATA 295 Mb/s (via USB-A)
Internal SATA 394 Mb/s
Here are the CrystalDiskMark results for my internal SATA SSD:
Other posted results for this drive suggest the RND Q1T1 speeds for Kingston XS-1000 should be around 30Mb/s read and 80Mb/s write, similar my internal SATA SSD.
Is this drive OK - could it be faulty and in need of returning under the guarantee?
Could there be a fault with my laptop or its USB-C port?
Is it worth testing a USB 3.2/thunderbolt cable instead?
Or, do you think the above tests for small files / random read-writes are OK and nothing to worry about? Or, perhaps I'm misunderstanding something ...
I'm testing an external Kingston XS1000 1TB SSD USB 3.2 Gen 2 Portable drive.
Here are the CrystalDiskMark results using the supplied usb-c cable:
Connected to UBS-C (USB 3.1 Gen2 / Thunderbolt 3 port)
Connected to UBS-A (USB 3.1 Gen1 port)
The SEQ Q8T1 results are as expected, with the connection via USB-C being as per the stated speeds for this SSD drive, and the connection via USB-A being just under half that.
What surprises me is the RND Q1T1 results. This drive is much faster on this benchmark via the slower USB-A port.
I'm getting much lower speeds in real-life file writes - probably as expected, but at least USB-C is always faster than USB-A.
However, for copying a large number of small files, the difference between USB-A and USB-C is small, and my Kingston XS-1000 is much slower for small files than my internal SATA SSD. So, this still begs the question, why is this Kingston XS1000 handling small files so unexpectedly slowly.
Here's the results of my real life tests (in Windows 11 64 bit):
16.8Gb multiple small files (4413 photos)
External SATA 151 Mb/s (via USB-C)
External SATA 135 Mb/s (via USB-A)
Internal SATA 226 Mb/s
24.8Gb one very large file
External SATA 430 Mb/s (via USB-C)
External SATA 306 Mb/s (via USB-A)
Internal SATA 330 Mb/s
15Gb (4 large files)
External SATA 415 Mb/s (via USB-C)
External SATA 295 Mb/s (via USB-A)
Internal SATA 394 Mb/s
Here are the CrystalDiskMark results for my internal SATA SSD:
Other posted results for this drive suggest the RND Q1T1 speeds for Kingston XS-1000 should be around 30Mb/s read and 80Mb/s write, similar my internal SATA SSD.
Is this drive OK - could it be faulty and in need of returning under the guarantee?
Could there be a fault with my laptop or its USB-C port?
Is it worth testing a USB 3.2/thunderbolt cable instead?
Or, do you think the above tests for small files / random read-writes are OK and nothing to worry about? Or, perhaps I'm misunderstanding something ...