![]() This board is still at the heart of my NASpi. Troubled at launch with inferior network performance, subsequent updates fixed the transfer issues. Prior to Raspberry Pi 4, this was the ultimate board to go to, with increased Ethernet performance (up to 300Mbits) and 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz 802.11b/g/n/ac wireless band. Let’s hope the same fate awaits Raspberry PI 4. Thankfully, that got resolved with time and the Raspberry Pi 3B+ was capable of using increased speeds. I remember this being an issue with Raspberry Pi3B+ where initial transfer speeds were worse than on Raspberry Pi 2. The most surprising is the WiFi 2.4Ghz result, where despite the boost in CPU, data can’t keep a consistent rate. You could grab one from Seeed Studio or go directly to the Raspberry Pi partners stores. The WiFi shares the bus with USB 2.0 so I’m expecting some serious bottlenecks there. The latest and greatest! The board comes with a 1Gbit adapter and it’s capable of serving 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz 802.11b/g/n/ac wireless LAN networks. So in all cases, the Raspberry Pi board will be responsible for the final Raspberry Pi Network Speed Test result. I’m able to easily oversaturate the network with the direct “over the USB3.0” transfers reaching 270MB/s. ![]() The files are written to an SSD (PNY SSD CS900 UK/ US – $30) connected via USB 3.0 and 1Gbit network. Asus P8Z77 V-Deluxe integrated 1Gbit Ethernet. ![]()
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