12-22-2007, 05:58 PM | #1 |
Junior Member
Posts: 1
Karma: 10
Join Date: Dec 2007
Device: Kindle
|
USB Transfer Speed
I am curious to know what kind of transfer speeds others are getting
when sending files over the USB connection to the Kindle? According to Amazon, the Kindle uses USB 2.0. However, I have experienced very slow data transfer rates when transfering files over the USB connection. For example, I transfered a 50 MB mp3 and it took 10-12 minutes. I tried this from a PC (running Windows XP) and from a Mac (running OS X 10.5 and another unning OS X 10.4) with similar, slow results. I have also transferred the file to the built-in memory and to an SD card. Again, same slow transfer speeds in both cases. By way of comparison, I transfered the same mp3 to an iPod and it took about 10 seconds to tranfer. I contacted Amazon Kindle support and, after checking with the developers, they reported back to me that the transfer speeds I am seeing are as expected for the device. I'm not very happy with this answer as these speeds are worse than you would get with even a USB 1.1 device. I asked this question on a different forum and one owner reported that he was able to transfer 50 MB in about 40 seconds. It seems very strange to get such a wide variance in transfer speeds for two different Kindles. I would be very interested to hear from someone who is getting faster transfer speeds. Thanks for any input. |
02-28-2009, 01:06 PM | #2 |
Junior Member
Posts: 1
Karma: 10
Join Date: Feb 2009
Device: Kindle 2
|
Having same basic problem. Extremely slow transfer speeds using Vista and Kindle 2. Sometimes transfer speed will show 0 bytes/sec, other times 3-4 bytes/sec.
I did try a soft-reset of the Kindle 2, but that did not help. |
Advert | |
|
02-28-2009, 06:44 PM | #3 |
Banned
Posts: 1,300
Karma: 1479
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Peoples Republic of Washington
Device: Reader / iPhone / Librie / Kindle
|
Are you using a USB hub? Sometimes hubs and USB devices interact negatively.
I've used my Kindle 1 and 2 with a Mac Pro and saw much better transfer rates than you are reporting but I was plugged directly into the Mac Pro. |
02-28-2009, 07:14 PM | #4 |
Junior Member
Posts: 1
Karma: 10
Join Date: Feb 2009
Device: Kindle2
|
On Windows XP, my Kindle 2 shows up as a removable disc, but no directories are visible and I can't copy anything onto it. On Windows 7, I see the directories and can copy content, but it's only getting 2.28KB/sec, when it's transferring at all.
It took two hours to transfer 7.5MB in 21 books downloaded from manybooks.net. a 4.9MB MP3 is currently at the 22 minute mark, and isn't even 50% complete. I'm not using any USB hubs. I'm hooked directly to the onboard USB. |
02-28-2009, 07:44 PM | #5 |
Resident Curmudgeon
Posts: 75,617
Karma: 134254544
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Roslindale, Massachusetts
Device: Kobo Libra 2, Kobo Aura H2O, PRS-650, PRS-T1, nook STR, PW3
|
Have any of you with slow USB speeds tried a different USB port on your computer or even a different computer?
|
Advert | |
|
02-28-2009, 08:22 PM | #6 | |
Banned
Posts: 1,300
Karma: 1479
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Peoples Republic of Washington
Device: Reader / iPhone / Librie / Kindle
|
Quote:
I'd suggest taking your Kindle to another computer. Every so often folks get USB flash drives with bad FLASH chips that produce incredibly poor write speeds and need to have their USB flash drive replaced. The Kindle isn't immune to this kind of failure. If your Kindle is slow with the other system then likely your Kindle has issues. Last night I transfered about 150MB of titles from Fictionwise onto my Kindle 1 and Kindle 2 (the big re-sync) via USB and it only took a couple minutes for each Kindle to swallow everything (several hundred titles). |
|
02-28-2009, 08:23 PM | #7 |
Evangelist
Posts: 405
Karma: 692
Join Date: Sep 2006
Device: Samsung Galaxy Note 3 | Kindle Paperwhite | iPad Mini
|
I have the same problems with the Kindle. In transferring my files from Calibre to the Kindle via the USB cable, it takes several minutes whereas the Sony transfer is much shorter.
|
03-02-2009, 03:31 PM | #8 |
Banned
Posts: 1,300
Karma: 1479
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Peoples Republic of Washington
Device: Reader / iPhone / Librie / Kindle
|
OK, I think I figured it out.
I've only hooked my Kindle 2 up via USB to a Mac Pro at home. At Home I'm not running 10.4 or 10.5. At Work I'm running 10.5. I hooked up the Kindle 2 via USB to my Mac Pro at work and all hell broke loose. The culprit is Spotlight. It is sucking down all your Kindle's bandwidth creating a Spotlight index of all the content on the Kindle. I'm researching how to club Spotlight over the head and keep it off the Kindle but for now it's definitely a problem (unless you aren't using 10.4 or 10.5). UPDATE: Go to the Spotlight control panel's Privacy tab and drag the Kindle's icon from Finder into the panel. This will create a file on the Kindle that marks it as "Do No Spotlight This Device!" If you ever notice a directory on the Kindle named .Spotlight-V100 don't delete it! That's where the file is stored, in that directory. Last edited by scotty1024; 03-02-2009 at 03:59 PM. Reason: Update on how to disable spotlight on the Kindle |
03-21-2010, 05:55 AM | #9 |
Zealot
Posts: 126
Karma: 1826
Join Date: Jan 2010
Device: Kindle 2
|
I have the same problem but on windows 7. it could be the indexing service. not sure
trying to search for a it further.. |
03-21-2010, 11:03 AM | #10 |
Zealot
Posts: 144
Karma: 3168
Join Date: Feb 2010
Device: Kindle DX
|
On my pc it is somewhat slow...however on my laptop it's pretty fast.
I use calibre on both..the pc is windows xp and is nearly 5 years old. the laptop is on ubuntu and is two years old....it's like night and day. I think calibre tends to work much better under linux.. |
01-21-2011, 07:08 PM | #11 |
Junior Member
Posts: 1
Karma: 10
Join Date: Jan 2011
Device: Sony prs 600
|
Solution
I was about to drive myself crazy with the slow speed of the USB transfer cable. Finally, I figured it out. Download the book instantly from the internet into Calibre. Then download it instantly from Calibri onto an SD media card you just stick into the proper slot in your computer. Then, stick the media card into the Sony reader, and, instantly, you are reading. Of course, these memory cards can hold 2 gigabytes and up of data, depending on which one you buy, so you can store thousands of books on them, and then erase them and start over after you have read those thousands of books. I'm burning that damn USB cable.
|
01-21-2011, 07:12 PM | #12 | |
Guru
Posts: 987
Karma: 8641
Join Date: Aug 2010
Device: Kindle 3G+WiFi
|
Quote:
|
|
01-21-2011, 08:38 PM | #13 |
Enthusiast
Posts: 29
Karma: 12
Join Date: Jan 2011
Device: Kindle 3, Kindle Fire
|
Out of curiousity, I gave it a try and transfered 50MB of mp3 files to my K3 in 20 seconds. Using a laptop with Windows 7, doing a copy and paste. Going the other way, I copied a 117MB file from the K3 to the laptop at just over 11MB/sec.
Dave Last edited by DaveSp; 01-21-2011 at 08:42 PM. |
01-21-2011, 08:43 PM | #14 |
Confused
Posts: 402
Karma: 5538
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Bay Area
Device: Kindle DXG
|
They probably use class2/4 memory so...
you'll get around 2-4mb/s sustained transfers. Make sure you are using usb 2.0 (enable it in bios), update your chipset/usb drivers. Plug the device directly into the motherboard, don't use a front panel port (lots of cases use cheap low-quality cables), and don't use a non-powered hub like a keyboard or monitor usb port. |
01-22-2011, 08:24 AM | #15 |
Zealot
Posts: 126
Karma: 7922
Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Zagreb, Croatia
Device: Kindle 3 - Galaxy Tab 10.1
|
I connected my K3 to old desktop (I believe 4 years old or so) with Vista and two new laptops with W7 and in all three cases USB transfer is very fast, no problems at all. Since all three, even that old one, have a high-end hardware in them, it must be a computer issue, I don't think Kindle is to blame.
In the other hand, I use all computers for work, so there are no games or bunch of suspicious freeware or something like that installed, so my OSes are as clean as they can be. If my 4-year old PC works well I'd attribute slow USB to a software. Althought there are so many different computers out there, it's hard to tell just like that where'e the problem. |
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
How to transfer documents via USB? | bob coxner | Amazon Kindle | 1 | 09-17-2010 03:24 PM |
Kindle DX -- USB File Transfer | Red Line Train | Amazon Kindle | 6 | 07-01-2009 07:17 PM |
No High-Speed USB ? | allovertheglobe | iRex | 5 | 10-20-2008 03:23 PM |
Using USB cable to transfer files | sassanik | Fictionwise eBookwise | 2 | 05-23-2008 11:55 PM |
PRS-500 Speed of changing to/from USB transfer mode | alexbe | Sony Reader Dev Corner | 4 | 08-31-2007 11:49 AM |