It very much does do the job it claims to. Though I do have a concern about performance, thank you for giving Xtaf out of your own time. Not sure if its' normal to be reading 12 and a half times more data than its' writing when the primary operation is to write. I could also guess performance is a price to pay if Xtaf has to do a lot of proprietary formatting for everything it reads/writes on an Xbox storage volume.Ĭould be related: During the 40 kBytes/second writing speed the performance monitor also reports around 500 kBytes/second. I don't like to place blame especially as this tool has been written and provided to us for free, but I was wondering if this is a known issue or isn't a big task to fix/improve. It started at 2 MBytes/second but then dropped to 40 kBytes/second within a few minutes. I have also tried on my other computer (E-SATA / AHCI), only a slight improvement at the start of the job. I noticed they were operating in IDE mode, so I changed them to AHCI to see if that improved things - didn't. There must be something wrong, no hard disk should be writing this slowly.įirst thing I did was check the storage controller options in my BIOS. As it got more into either reading from the old or writing to the new disk, the speed crept to around only 40 kBytes/second within 2 minutes into the job. Pretty slow for a hard disk on a SATA link, but I thought maybe it'll get quicker as it gets into it. At the start of the 'Inject folder' operation it was running at around 800 kBytes/second. I opened Windows' performance monitor (Windows 7 圆4 btw) to check how fast Xtaf was writing. Not sure how long it took to write this to the new disk, it's been going for 4 hours now. The low performance didn't occur to me until exporting the neutral account data (downloaded games, installed games from disc, etc.). Writing it to the new HD did take a while though. I first exported the save data for his account, I didn't notice the performance of reading this as it was only 40 MB. Both disks are connected to my computer using E-SATA ports, and the storage controller reports them working at a 3 GB/s link speed (nope won't be data speed ). I am transferring data from an old style hard disk (in that long case with the proprietary SATA connector) to a new style hard disk (regular SATA connector) for a friend. I have a question about the speed in which Xtaf can read/write to a 360 hard disk.
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