Wireless Benchmarks

Our review of the My Passport Wireless loaded up video files of varying bitrates into the device and tried to stream them to various devices to determine the effectiveness of the WLAN component. The range factor was addressed using a W-Fi strength analyzer app on a smartphone. The My Passport Wireless Pro makes it necessary for us to adopt a different strategy, as the dual-band aspect also deserves attention. Fortunately, the SSH access and software capabilities of the My Passport Wireless Pro allows us to utilize iperf for benchmarking the Wi-Fi capabilities. The OS running on the unit ships with iperf v2.0.5 pre-installed.

Two of the striking differences in the WLAN specifications of the My Passport Wireless and the Pro are the presence of a 5 GHz 802.11ac radio in the latter and the downgrade from a 2T2R 2.4 GHz 802.11n solution in the former to a 1T1R one in the Pro. Western Digital indicated that they are targeting the My Passport Wireless Pro for high-performance applications in close-range scenarios, and the 2.4 GHz band is retained only for legacy reasons.

Our evaluation strategy consists of using iperf to determine TCP and UDP downlink and uplink rates at three different locations (marked X, Y and Z in blue) in a 1800 sq. ft. home, as indicated below. While the My Passport Wireless Pro (set up at location M in the floorplan) was set as the server node, an Intel D54250WYKH NUC running Windows 10 Pro x64 was used as the client at the three different locations. The NUC sports an Intel Dual Band Wireless-AC 7260 2T2R 802.11ac solution.

The purpose of our benchmarking was not to tune the stream configuration for obtaining maximum possible bandwidth. Rather, we wanted to replay the same stream across multiple locations in order to determine comparative performance. iperf with default parameters was used for benchmarking. On the 'server', we ran the following command:

TCP: iperf -s -B 192.168.60.1
UDP: iperf -s -u -B 192.168.60.1

The 'client' was connected to it using the following command:

TCP: iperf -c 192.168.60.1 -P ${num_parallel_streams} -t 30
UDP: iperf -c 192.168.60.1 -u -b ${curr_bw_to_test}m -t 30

The number of parallel streams were tested between 20 and 25 for the TCP case. The maximum obtained bandwidth was recorded. For the UDP case, we altered the bandwidth to test in order to arrive at the value that resulted in less than 1% packet loss during transmission. The roles of the server and client were then reversed, and the same benchmarks were processed.

The numbers below were recorded with the unit in standalone wireless NAS mode. Using it as a Wi-Fi access point with uplink in the same band as the usage band is bound to bring down the numbers even further.4

Western Digital My Passport Wireless Pro 2TB WLAN Benchmarks (Mbps)
  2.4 GHz SSID 5 GHz SSID
  TCP DL TCP UL UDP DL UDP UL TCP DL TCP UL UDP DL UDP UL
Location X 9.82 14.3 9.17 17.2 SSID Not Visible
Location Y 33.7 26.6 34.8 32.8 37.3 5.32 37.5 8.19
Location Z 80.9 67.7 84.3 75.4 183 114 197 126

Wi-Fi numbers are heavily dependent on the usage environment, and the only takeaways we have from the above are the fact that the 5 GHz SSID is handicapped by range issues, but, it outperforms the 2.4 GHz SSID when it comes to same-room usage (which is the typical use-case for the My Passport Wireless Pro). The hard drive or attached storage media access rates are unlikely to the source of bottlenecks when it comes to real-world data transfers involving the unit.

DAS Benchmarks Miscellaneous Aspects and Concluding Remarks
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  • AgeOfPanic - Monday, June 27, 2016 - link

    I really hope you will review the new mycloud pro series NAS devices as well. Hardware transcoding for Plex is important to me and I think these units are the first to support that. Running a Windows based server now, but hoping to transfer to NAS someday.
  • xCyborg - Saturday, July 2, 2016 - link

    I guess this is not SSD.
  • nbourbaki - Sunday, July 3, 2016 - link

    InFuse works perfectly with the My Passport wireless Pro on my iPad Air with MKV high bitrate files. I'm using the Twonky server because the Plex server died and I haven't been able to get it running again. VLC works, but there is some stutter on high bitrate files
  • saelim - Tuesday, August 23, 2016 - link

    Plex Media Server is good feature for me.
    http://www.ubearymuch.com/my-passport-wireless-pro...
  • qplgzzpmakgm - Monday, August 24, 2020 - link

    http://bitly.com/zoom-viber-skype-psy

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