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- #INTEL USB 3.0 EXTENSIBLE HOST CONTROLLER FOR WINDOWS 10 DRIVER#
- #INTEL USB 3.0 EXTENSIBLE HOST CONTROLLER FOR WINDOWS 10 WINDOWS 10#
Change from "Quick Removal" to "Best performance". Then go to Device Manager, right-click on one and select Properties. I am not sure, but you could change that from Device Manager.
#INTEL USB 3.0 EXTENSIBLE HOST CONTROLLER FOR WINDOWS 10 WINDOWS 10#
I guess they are due to the different bandwidth management Windows 10 do on the transfer than that of Windows 7. So the bottlenecks are not due to the driver.
#INTEL USB 3.0 EXTENSIBLE HOST CONTROLLER FOR WINDOWS 10 DRIVER#
However, if you are using the same Windows 7 driver in Windows 10, it should work the same. Or use a USB 3.0 port and a USB 2.0 port, but then you limit the maximum transfer rate to 480 Mbit/sec. The solution is to use two USB 3.0 ports of a different line, which in a laptop is not possible. USB cannot guarantee the transfer rate as firewire could.
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That's explains the drops, because there are some bottlenecks during the transfer when the buffer is full. If the two USB 3.0 ports are on the same line, power and bandwidth is divided between the two connected hard disks. I don't have the hardware or lad to perform any further tests.