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WHY THE HECK IS THIS TAKING SO LONG?!

azillian

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Why is it taking more then 20 minutes to drop less then 2 gig's worth of CR2 files onto my computer? I have the brand new iMac with the i7, 16 gigs of ram, 2 TB internal HD.

Yesterday it took more then an hour to drop 5 or 6 gigs!!!

This is UNREAL!!!!

Does anyone have any idea what the heck I'm doing wrong?

I use CF cards, my card reader is a Kodak 5-IN-1, it's plugged into a USB hub because all my USB ports on the computer are taken up.

Thank you in advance!
 
Yeah...I know what you mean...my iMac's USB transfer speeds seem pretty poor. What I call pi$$-poor speeds, actually, using my Lexar USB 2.0 CF card reader. On my "big Mac" with a Firewire CF card reader, the transfers SMOKE!!!!

I've been meaning to look for a Thunderbolt port card reader for my iMac, 'cause the iMac's USB speeds seem pretty lame. Dropping Firewire in favor of Thunderbolt has to rank as one of the stupider Apple moves of the past 20 years. The last time I looked for a Thunderbolt CF card reader, I could not find any on-line, but that's been over a year.
 
And one more thing... Usually when I import into Lightroom, I just plug in my card into the reader, go into Lightroom, make a new folder in my catalog, and then import straight from my card and also drop a back up in my back up folder.

Lately when I try, it just pulls up a menu with all the photos listed telling me the following photos can't be uploaded.... So then I need to go and drop them manually into a folder, and that's when it takes 20 minutes per gig. There has to be something I'm doing wrong, I just don't know what.
 
I would suspect the card reader - never liked the things myself. I have a 3-year old i3 iMac with 4 gig RAM and it only takes me about 30 sec to do about 0.5-1 gig of CR2 files going direct from the camera into a USB port. This is with an SD card in the camera, so I don't know if that could also be a factor.
 
My cheapo, non-"xtreme" cards will dump 8 gigs or so of photos in about 1-2 minutes tops.

It's almost certainly your computer or the reader.


Make sure that you have enough free RAM available. If you haven't restarted in days, and your RAM is all leaky and clogged up, that could easily increase file transfer times by several times.
 
Might be some conflict between the reader protocol and some other, recently installed soft. Maybe even some update of the system.
 
You might be running another program in the background as well, and it's hogging all your system's resources. Anti-virus and back-up software can do that.
 
Have you plugged in any other USB devices lately? Your USB hub might fall back to USB 1.1 speeds if there are any USB 1.1 devices plugged into it (I don't know how likely that really is, but it may be possible). USB 1.1 is limited to 1.5 MBps, which is fast enough for "slow" devices like keyboards and mice, but it really could take about 20 minutes to transfer a gigabyte of data at that rate. I'd suggest unplugging all other USB devices that are not necessary to rule out any "interference" from those devices.
 
I use CF cards, my card reader is a Kodak 5-IN-1, it's plugged into a USB hub because all my USB ports on the computer are taken up.
O,o,o ! Maybe you just overloaded your computer, in particular USB bus. External hub might be assign lower priority and maybe it's dropping to 1.1 protocol. There might be lots of reasons why even last generation computer may be bogged down. Especially if the boss is Microsoft. :D
 
Have you thought about upgrading to a thicker gauge internet cable?
 
Have you thought about upgrading to a thicker gauge internet cable?
:thumbup: Try to keep it still flexible. The cable.
 
Fragmented drives can also cause this as the drive spends all it's time seeking (which is slow) instead of writing (which is fast).

Defragging is free, so I'd at least check it off the list before spending money.

Then unplug all USB devices except the reader and give that a try.

THEN try a new reader.
 
Fragmented drives can also cause this as the drive spends all it's time seeking (which is slow) instead of writing (which is fast).

Defragging is free, so I'd at least check it off the list before spending money.

Then unplug all USB devices except the reader and give that a try.

THEN try a new reader.

I had a similar issue. I moved all files to a different drive, defragged (maybe reformatted) and that solved the problem.
 

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