What kind of file is this? Why do you need to feed it with more threads? It depends on the characteristics (I don't know better word for it) of the file usage.
Transferring a file from several places over network (short: Torrent-like)
If you are transferring an existing file, the program should
- as soon, as it gets know the size of the file, create it with empty content: this prevents later out-of-disk error (if there's not enough space, it will turns out at the creation, before downloading anything of it), also it helps the the performance;
- if you organize the transfer well (and why not), each thread will responsible for a distinct portion of the file, thus file writes will be distinct,
- even if somehow two threads pick the same portion of the file, it will cause no error, because they write the same data for the same file positions.
Appending data blocks to a file (short: logging)
If the threads just appends fixed or various-lenght info to a file, you should use a common thread. It should use a relatively large write buffer, so it can serve client threads quick (just taking the strings), and flush it out optimal scheduling and block size. It should use dedicated disk or even computer.
Also, there can be several performance issues, that's why are there logging servers around, even expensive commercial ones.
Reading and writing random time, random position (short: database)
It requires complex design, with mutexes etc., I never done this kinda stuff, but I can imagine. Ask Oracle for some tricks :)