02-10-2023, 01:28 PM
It's important to understand that there is no direct correlation between the speed of your Internet Service Provider (ISP) and the speed of your local network. Your NAS' speed will be limited by the speed of your local network, and not by your ISP's speed. The maximum speed you can achieve with a NAS over a Gigabit Ethernet network is around 100 Mbps, or around 12.5 MB/s.
In your case, achieving speeds of 80-90 Mbps (or 10-11 MB/s) is actually a good speed for a Gigabit Ethernet network. Link aggregation, also known as NIC bonding, can potentially improve network speeds, but it depends on the support for it in both the router and the NAS, as well as the operating system of the computer you're using to transfer files. In your case, it sounds like both the router and the NAS support link aggregation, and it is configured correctly.
It's possible that the speed of your NAS is limited by other factors such as disk I/O performance or network congestion. You could try benchmarking the disk performance of your NAS, or testing the network speed between the NAS and a computer to see if there is any bottleneck there.
In your case, achieving speeds of 80-90 Mbps (or 10-11 MB/s) is actually a good speed for a Gigabit Ethernet network. Link aggregation, also known as NIC bonding, can potentially improve network speeds, but it depends on the support for it in both the router and the NAS, as well as the operating system of the computer you're using to transfer files. In your case, it sounds like both the router and the NAS support link aggregation, and it is configured correctly.
It's possible that the speed of your NAS is limited by other factors such as disk I/O performance or network congestion. You could try benchmarking the disk performance of your NAS, or testing the network speed between the NAS and a computer to see if there is any bottleneck there.