is there anyone here considering to buy PM-951 512GB for £160? read: 1800 write: 700
roberri
15 Dec 16#13
To bought one of these bit returned it after reading about its low endurance rating. I had the 1tb model but was pretty shocked that you can only write 78Tb of data to it before it locks it's to read only mode to "preserve the integrity of the data". Models, admitedly more expensive, have much higher endurance ratings. This drive only has an endurance rating of 78TBW (terabytes written).
Now, I don't know if I'd ever write 78Tb of data to it over the course of its life, but I don't want that kind of limit hanging over my head every time I use my computer.
taras to roberri
15 Dec 16#14
Can be done on a consumer (home machine) but not on a 256gb ssd - 1tb or 2tb drive yes - but not 256gb .
sharedknowledge to roberri
23 Dec 16#17
Only the 128GB model is 78TB, the 1TB is an order of magnitude higher, at 576TB.
YG1985
15 Dec 16#12
Nice hot from me :smiley:
Hammondhammond
15 Dec 16#11
Wern't Ocuk banned on here for a while as they were so poor?
Joe909090
14 Dec 16#10
Personally I agree with what you say regards OCUKs service.
smckirdy
14 Dec 16#9
OCUK have better customer service as well, which is always worth considering. Scans not bad though, they aren't the Curry's of PC hardware, but they aren't as good as the OCUK guys who have always bent over backwards any time I had an issue and thrown in more than a few extras over the years.
Yes pretty much so AS long as its a NVME dirve not a sata interface.. this drive is nice but slow compared to other NVME drives eg samsung 960 ..
TheGreatMogul
14 Dec 16#4
Are these sticks faster than the normal SSD's?
Gkains to TheGreatMogul
14 Dec 162#7
Yes.
SATA3 is limited to 6Gb/s which means a max of around 550MB/s.
The max read here is up to 1,570MB/s.
Of course, these are theoretical burst values so probably not that useful but they make good headlines.
Don't think this drive performs that well in benchmarks. Here it is vs the now rather old Samsung 850 Pro: http://www.anandtech.com/bench/product/1817?vs=1415
Then again the M.2 drives which do perform very well can suffer from thermal throttling since M.2 is physically so small. On desktop that can be mitigated with a heatsink but in laptops there usually isn't any space.
fishmaster to TheGreatMogul
16 Dec 16#16
They are, not that you'd notice, and to top it all this isn't a fast M.2 SSD either, this is a budget M.2 SSD
wojti_lad
14 Dec 161#2
79.99 from overclockers
Joe909090 to wojti_lad
14 Dec 16#3
Excluding delivery, so the "local shop" option here is cheaper, though OCUK is slightly cheaper if you do want it delivered at £88.69
tempt
14 Dec 161#1
82.44 including delivery from BT Shop. Hey you want to get scammed, worth paying that extra to buy from Scan.
Opening post
Apologies if it's been posted:
Specifications
Capacity - 256GB
Edition - 600p Series
Form Factor - M.2 (22x80)
Height - 1.5 mm
Interface - PCIe 3.0 (x4)
Host Controller Interface - NVMe
Flash Memory Type - 3D TLC NAND
Max. Read - 1570 MB/s
Max. Write - 540 MB/s
DRAM Cache Memory - N/A
DRAM Cache Memory Type
Max. Random Read 4K - 71,000 IOPS
Max. Random Write 4K - 112,000 IOPS
Latency N/A
Special Features
AES 256-bit self-encryption
UBER: <1 sector per 10^15 bits read
Power Consumption (active) - 100 mW
Max. Endurance Rating - 72 TBW
MTBF - 1,600,000 hours
Max. Operating Vibration - 2.17 GRMS (5-700Hz) Max
Max. Non-operating Vibration - 3.13 GRMS (5-800Hz) Max
Max. Operating Shock
Max. Non-operating Shock
Connectivity - 1 x M.2 (22x80) (PCIe 3.0 x4)
OS Support
Bracket N/A
Package Type - Retail
18 comments
https://www.amazon.co.uk/d/Internal-Solid-State-Drives/Intel-SSDPEKKW256G7X1-600p-256-GB-NVMe-PCIe/B01L3LQLBG/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1494243568&sr=8-3&keywords=M.2+256gb+pcie
Now, I don't know if I'd ever write 78Tb of data to it over the course of its life, but I don't want that kind of limit hanging over my head every time I use my computer.
SATA3 is limited to 6Gb/s which means a max of around 550MB/s.
The max read here is up to 1,570MB/s.
Of course, these are theoretical burst values so probably not that useful but they make good headlines.
Don't think this drive performs that well in benchmarks. Here it is vs the now rather old Samsung 850 Pro:
http://www.anandtech.com/bench/product/1817?vs=1415
Then again the M.2 drives which do perform very well can suffer from thermal throttling since M.2 is physically so small. On desktop that can be mitigated with a heatsink but in laptops there usually isn't any space.