

- #Blackmagic disk speed test mac direct download pro
- #Blackmagic disk speed test mac direct download tv
- #Blackmagic disk speed test mac direct download download
#Blackmagic disk speed test mac direct download download
Or, download an app called NetSpot (free) and it will give you a GUI view. Inside there is a report showing what your local wifi looks like. wifi.csv, or wifi.txt, cannot recall exactly. Once that's created, there is a file called wifi.something. * Run a site survey by opt-click the wifi icon and choose Create Diagnostic Report. I'm not sure the Powerline thing will add much clarity.
#Blackmagic disk speed test mac direct download pro
I'm hoping you can do direct from the MBPro to the Mini back to back (1 cable), AND you can do the Mini to the Pro through the router (2 cables (or more of course)), and see if there is a difference? But if this isn't an option let's park it for now. * Get a USB/Ethernet adaptor for the MBPro and transfer between the Mini and the Pro. Yeah, a couple of things I would try, in no particular order. This powerline is not powerful for reaching the same speed as a clean Ethernet cable, but it eliminates the Wifi, and I can try Ethernet on both ends.Īnything else you might think I should try? I do have a powerline network adapter that I could use. I can't do Ethernet on both ends unfortunately. I'll move my Mac Mini next to the router and try: Mac Mini - Ethernet - Router - WiFi - MacBook Pro/Windows computer.

I will do some more extensive testing tomorrow (it's 4 am here now). I belive SMB2 was used (that's the default on MacOS?). I used File Sharing from Sharing in System Prefs. What do you mean? Are you referring to which computer did what? In that case I was copying the file from my Mac, to my Windows computer. This was Wifi on both ends, I should start clarify in more detail what I actually do.
#Blackmagic disk speed test mac direct download tv
I was streaming from my NAS to my Apple TV at this moment, but that shouldn't affect the all over WiFi speed that much. I merely ment that I should expect higher than 10MB/s. Hehe, well 1750Mbps was a bit of a stretch. Ideally we need Gigabit Ethernet to Gigabit Ethernet. But if your windows machine is wifi, then that clouds the issue. So with SMB it’s not going to limit it to 3MB/s. But my previous NAS used SMB 1 and i was seeing 30MB/s to 40MB/s from my desk with a 700Mb/s to 800Mb/s type negotiated connection. Was this Ethernet to router to wifi? Or Ethernet to router to Ethernet? Who was talking and what were they using? And assuming that’s a single large file, that’s atrocious.

But looking at the connection details you posted earlier, your 5GHz connection looks good.Īnyway, if I understand correctly, the transfer from the Windows machine to the Mac was the worst yet - 2.8MB/s. The may be doing channel bonding perhaps. In fact I’m not totally sure how they’re getting those 850Mb/s 2.4Ghz and 1,750Mb/s 5GHz connections that they claim. I’d guess 2x2, so 867Mb/s.Īnd with AirDrop specifically, I’m not sure what it does from a protocol perspective. I’m not sure what the iPhone supports, but i suspect it’s less. From a wifi perspective, on your MBPro it’s going to top out at 1.3Gb/s since it’s a three antenna system.
