Hi, Welcome to Microsoft Windows 7 Answers Forum! You may try the steps as below and check if the issue gets fixed. Step 1: Ensure that you disable any antivirus program on your computer and create a restore point before performing the above steps. Creating system restore point manually: 1. Open System by clicking the Start button, clicking Control Panel, clicking System and Maintenance, and then clicking System. In the left pane, click System Protection, if you are prompted for an administrator password or confirmation, type the password or provide confirmation.
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Click the System Protection tab, and then click Create. In the System Protection dialog box, type a description, and then click Create.
Follow the document below for additional help about creating System Restore Point: Step 2: Try to uninstall the network card and then reinstall. Here are the steps to uninstall the network card from Device Manager: 1.
Open Device Manager by clicking the Start button, clicking Control Panel, clicking System and Maintenance, and then clicking Device Manager. If you are prompted for an administrator password or confirmation, type the password or provide confirmation. On the Device Manager window, look for the network card and let us know if you see any yellow exclamation mark in front of the Device. Right click on the Device and select Uninstall.
Re-install the latest network drivers from the Manufacturer’s website. Access the link below to know about how to get into Device Manager: Now try to follow the below provided link to Update a driver for hardware that isn't working properly and check for the issue. Boot the computer in safe mode with networking and check for the issue. Follow this below provided link to start your computer in safemode with networking. Hope this helped Thanks and Regards: Suresh Kumar- Microsoft Support.
Visit our and let us know what you think. Hi Thanks for reply.Network adapter is working fine Normal download speeds etc from the internet on win 7 64 bit and win xp sp3 32bit are fast, and like I said above 32bit to 32bit file tranfer across a home wired network is also fast but 32 to 64 or 64 to 32 is very much slower.I have an asus P7P55D LE motherboard which is certfied for win7 and has all the latest drivers so I cannot believe this is a driver issue more a 32bit 64 bit one.My brother who also has a similar setup in London is experiencing exactly the same problem 32 to 32 fine 32 to 64 or vice versa same problem. Many Thanks Mike. Rodber, did you find a solution. I have the exact same problem, and it's not just a home network.
This is a huge network of 600+ PC's. 32bit to 32bit file transfer is fast. As is 64bit to 64bit. But when transferring from one to another, eg, 32bit to 64bit; or 64bit to 32bit, there is a considerable slowdown. Ie: I just tried to copy 4 DVD ISO's from one location to another using my workstation which is 64bit Windows 7 Enterprise. It said it's estimated time to copy was over 1 hour. And from experience it is this slow.
So I cancelled this particular transfer and logged onto a 32bit Windows XP Pro machine and performed the same copy procedure, it took 14 minutes as it was 32bit to 32bit. - The weird thing here is the server where the original files are stored are 32bit.
- The destination PC where the files needed to end up was 32bit. - But the PC I first tried to do the Copy & Paste function was a 64bit workstation. - As soon as I used a 32bit workstation/server the transfer was fine. So I'm finding I try to do most of my file copies from the server instead of my 64bit workstation.
I see this is going to be a huge pain in the rear once my network gets to be more of a mixed 64bit/32bit environment. Hi, Disable the security software’s and check if the problem persists. Also check if the problem persists in safe mode with networking. If the problem doesn’t persists in safe mode with networking then perform clean boot.
To use a Safe mode with networking option, follow these steps: a. Restart your computer and start pressing the F8 key on your keyboard. On a computer that is configured for booting to multiple operating systems, you can press the F8 key when the Boot Menu appears. Use the arrow keys to choose Safe mode with networking in Windows Advanced Options menu appears, and then press ENTER. Follow this below provided link to start your computer in safemode.
If you don't get that error message in safe mode then it means that some third party application is causing the problem. Steps to perform clean boot: Starting your computer by using a minimal set of drivers and startup programs so that you can determine whether a background program is interfering with your game or program. This kind of startup is known as a 'Clean boot.' To perform a clean boot on a computer, follow these steps. Click Start, type msconfig in the Start Search box, and then press ENTER.
If you are prompted for an administrator password or for a confirmation, type the password, or click Continue. On the General tab, click Selective Startup. Under Selective Startup, click to clear the Load Startup Items check box. Click the Services tab, click to select the Hide All Microsoft Services check box, and then click Disable All. When you are prompted, click Restart.
After the computer starts, check whether the problem is resolved. Please monitor the system in the Clean Boot environment. If the problem does not occur, it indicates that the problem is related to one application or service we have disabled. You may use the MSCONFIG tool again to re-enable the disabled item one by one to find out the culprit. If your issue is resolved, follow the How to Determine What is Causing the Problem section in the KB article to narrow down the exact source.. Also, see the section on how return your computer to a Normal startup mode Thanks and Regards: I.
Suuresh Kumar - Microsoft Support. That remark is no help whatsoever.Both computers are configured correctly.And it is between XP SP3 32bit and win 7 64 bit ( not Vista ) that this problem occurs.I measure the speed by how long it takes me to transfer a file Win7 64bit to XP 32bit.Compared how long it took me to transfer a file Win 7 32bit to XP 32 bit.Which was a lot quicker.Did you read my first post??To say that your computers are ok does not really mean anything or help in any way.
What are your computer specs?? Regards Mike. To say that your computers are ok does not really mean anything or help in any way. What are your computer specs?? Hi The remarks are geared to alleviate the anxiety in your two top posts. You keep repeating several times that you believe that the problem is x32 to x64.
Since I am getting on a Giga Network with Giga Switch 70MB/sec. (that is 560Mb/sec. And the 70MB/sec. Is the limit of the Hard Drive) between Win 7 x32 to x64, and between Win 7 X64 to WinXP SP3. I do not believe that this is systemic problem between x32 to x64. The Giga network cards are all onboard versions of Realtek chipset (not exactly the same model numbers as yours).
However, some of these onboard cards known to be quirky, the popular card among enthusiasts are the Inter Giga cards. Since I assume that, you know how to configure Network Sharing’s, you seem to be so confidence that everything is OK, and get offended if a question is asked, I really do not know what to say anymore. Jack-MVP Windows Networking.
WWW.EZLAN.NET Jack MVP, Microsoft Windows Desktop Experience-Networking. Hi Jack Thanks for your reply.It is a problem with 32bit XPSP3 to 64bit Win7Ultimate and vice versa. I do not get anywhere near the transfer rates you state. I have the exact same problem as you. I am running 64bit windows7 (2pc) and 1 32bit windowsXP. I have been doing some amateur networking before and i found 1 weird trick actually 'improve' the situation. Here is my story: at first i am trying to stream video from my PC pc to my win7 PC using MPC-HC. SD video went fine but HD video sucking 2-3MB/s will lag off.
So i go troubleshoot and found out increasing MTU will help (so i tune the MTU to the MAX for all machines). But after a few days while i try transferring stuff and try to do CRC using QuickSFV i found that copying files from XP to win7 was slower but still 'ok' but when i try to access files in win7 from my XP machine, the speed was like 0.5MB/s. So i go ahead and tone down my MTU again to 1500bytes.
And all files transfer went back to 40-50MB/s (but video streaming got lagging again). So i think there must be a bug in some network layer between winxp and win7 so i play around with configures that i can reach.
Finally i found the perfect balance which is a bit weird. For windows 7 64bit, all MTU is set to 4kb For windows XP 32bit, all MTU is set to maximum (9kb) then everything worked fine.:) I also found out that the problem has nothing to do with offloading. Note: also thanks to a cheap d-link gigabit switch that actually see 'a blink with every packet transferring' so i was able to light the blub and point the fingers to MTU.