Data Transfer Rate Converter

Convert between different data transfer rate units including Mbps, Gbps, MB/s, and KB/s.

Data Transfer Rate Converter
ready
$ convert --from [unit] --to [unit] --value [number]
$
>
formulas.ts

// Common Data Transfer Rate Converter Formulas

1const1 byte = 8 bits
2const1 Mbps = 1,000,000 bits/s
3const1 MB/s = 8 Mbps
references.json

// Common Data Transfer Rate Converter References

{
"USB 2.0":"480 Mbps",
"USB 3.0":"5 Gbps",
"Gigabit Ethernet":"1 Gbps",
"WiFi 6":"9.6 Gbps",
"Fiber Optic":"10-100 Gbps"
}
README.md

## What is Data Transfer Rate Conversion?

Data transfer rate measures how fast digital data moves, essential for understanding internet speeds, storage performance, and network capacity. Our converter handles both bit-based units (Mbps) and byte-based units (MB/s).

units.ts

// Common Data Transfer Units Explained

export const Mbps (Megabits per Second)

// Standard for internet speeds. 100 Mbps is a common home internet speed.

export const MB/s (Megabytes per Second)

// Common for file transfers. 1 MB/s = 8 Mbps. SSDs typically read at 500+ MB/s.

export const Gbps (Gigabits per Second)

// Used for high-speed networks. 1 Gbps = 1000 Mbps. Gigabit ethernet is now standard.

i

When to Use This Converter

Our data transfer converter is essential for IT professionals planning networks, consumers comparing internet plans, developers optimizing applications, and anyone troubleshooting slow transfers.

FAQ.md

## Frequently Asked Questions

01 ### Q: Why is my download slower than my internet speed?

/**

Internet speed is in bits (Mbps), but downloads show bytes (MB/s). Divide Mbps by 8 to get MB/s. 100 Mbps = 12.5 MB/s maximum.

*/

02 ### Q: What affects real-world transfer speeds?

/**

Server capacity, network congestion, WiFi interference, and device limitations all reduce speeds below the theoretical maximum.

*/