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  • Alistair - Monday, August 12, 2019 - link

    nice, this has been the best deal for a high performance 1TB drive in Canada for almost a year, was really hoping a 2tb would release!
  • voodoobunny - Monday, August 12, 2019 - link

    "ADATA’s 2 TB XPG SX8200 Pro is already available in the US for $289.99"

    If recent price drops are anything to go by, this should be at price-parity with the Intel 660p by Christmas.
    (which means, *you* get a 2TB! And *you* get a 2TB! And *you* get a 2TB! *Everybody* gets a 2TB! because it will be way *better* than the 660p...)
  • PEJUman - Tuesday, August 13, 2019 - link

    660p is QLC nand and as a result will always use half of the TLC counterparts. Considering both NANDs are made by Micron (what used to be Micron/Intel JV), I imagine pricing will always scale similarly... $180/$300 for 2TB QLC/TLC.

    So if you can get $200 2TB TLC using micron NAND in BF’19, I am betting the 660p 2TB QLC will be ~$120.
  • Bulat Ziganshin - Tuesday, August 13, 2019 - link

    why half? qlc/tlc = 4/3 and it doesn't include controller (which is more complex for tlc if you are goinf to reach the same perfromance). so for $200 tlc drive, equivalent qlc should be $170-180
  • PEJUman - Tuesday, August 13, 2019 - link

    2Tb 660p is selling now for $180 in US.
    I am not saying it scales perfectly, ergo the ~ sign. But controller and Dram is not $100, probably closer to $20-30, rest is NAND.
  • PEJUman - Tuesday, August 13, 2019 - link

    It Doubles between version because SLC:MLC:TLC:QLC is an increasing bit count. 1 bit, 2 bits, 3 bits, and 4 bits. Meaning 2:4:8:16 voltage level.
  • frenchy_2001 - Tuesday, August 13, 2019 - link

    Voltage levels double each time, stored bits do not.
    SLC->MLC 1bit->2bits = double
    MLC->TLC 2bits->3bits = 50% more
    TLC->QLC 3bits->4bits = 33% more
    This is bits/celll, but cell sizes are not necessarily the same (or even using the same tech).

    So far, biggest bit production boost has been from added layers in 3D NAND.
  • PEJUman - Tuesday, August 13, 2019 - link

    4 bits is 16 levels = 0000,0001,0010,0011,...1111
    3 bits is 8 levels = 000. 001, 010, 011, ... 111

    Bits are binary system, each digit increment meant doubling.
    Similarly, decimal (0 thru 9), where each digit increment meant 10 fold increase.

    Almost all of the modern NAND are 3D, with layers varying from 32 to 96, and soon beyond.
  • TheUnhandledException - Tuesday, August 13, 2019 - link

    The number of levels double but the number of bits does not. 4 bit per cell vs 3 bit per cell is only 33% more bits per cell. If you have flash with 1 billion cells then if it is TLC then it would be 3 Gb and if it is QLC it would be 4 Gb.
  • Fulljack - Tuesday, August 13, 2019 - link

    have been using the 512GB version since this May. can confirm this is a real good hardware
  • Charlie22911 - Tuesday, August 13, 2019 - link

    I want a 4TB NVME drive so bad, I’d love to get rid of my external spinning rust. I don’t even mind paying a premium for it, just give me the option.
  • Greg100 - Tuesday, August 13, 2019 - link

    Here you are...

    ...but why bother 4TB NVMe?
    The cheapest NVMe per TB is:
    Western Digital Ultrastar DC SN630 - 7.68TB

    In Germany you can buy it for:

    € 978,23 - Mindfactory

    € 978,24 - Compuland

    € 978,25 - VibuOnline

    € 978,26 - DriveCity

    € 978,28 - Klarsicht IT

    4TB SSDs are more expensive per TB than above 7.68 NVMe SSD.

    If you find something cheaper let me know.
  • Greg100 - Tuesday, August 13, 2019 - link

    You also need U.2 to M.2 cable from Intel # J15713-001, if you do not have MB with U.2 port.
  • Greg100 - Tuesday, August 13, 2019 - link

    Prices include 19% tax (VAT).
  • Greg100 - Tuesday, August 13, 2019 - link

    It’s also cheaper per TB than Samsung SSD 860 EVO 4TB SATA SSD!!!

    € 591,75 - Mindfactory

    € 591,76 - Compuland

    € 591,77 - VibuOnline

    € 591,78 - DriveCity

    Shame on you Samsung!
  • croc - Wednesday, August 14, 2019 - link

    You might also want to mention that this drive is a 2.5 inch form factor.

    OTOH, imagine four of these in a 1.0 raid array using the Highpoint SSD7110 raid controller.... And up to a total of 16...

    Plus up to a 6TB raid of nvme m.2 2280 drives. For those that feel the need for more speed (face it, this drive sucks at write performance...) you can also/or boot from this array in raid 0, 1 or 5 configurations.

    Anyway, great post.
  • Greg100 - Wednesday, August 14, 2019 - link

    2.5 inch form factor is always better, because you can place SSDs anywhere on the case, so you can improve the cooling conditions of SSDs.

    As for the faster drive, my favorite is:

    Micron 9300 PRO 15.36TB, U.2 SSD
    3500 MB/s (R/W)
    € 2579 (Xitra - Germany) for 15.36TB behemoth!
  • Luckz - Monday, December 2, 2019 - link

    Rocket have a 4TB now. E12S though with halved RAM.
  • WarthogARJ - Thursday, February 27, 2020 - link

    I don't think this was a very carefully researched posting: it gives you LESS information than a 2 minute Google search would turn up.

    For instance the vacuum on information on the DRAM ("capacity unknown"), and the pSLC Cache ("Supported").

    Just looking at past reviews by Anandtech itself would give you more information.

    And a lot of what it says is wrong, or at least misguided:
    (1) "ADATA’s XPG SX8200 Pro is a version of the company’s Gammix S11 Pro without an aluminum heat spreader, which ensures compatibility with laptops"

    Actually, no. The Gammix S11 Pro is a version of the SX8200.

    And as more knowledgeable reviewers have mentioned, all of the M.2 format can suffer from thermal throttling, so anyone using this SSD should either add a heat exchanger (not actually a heat "spreader") or make sure it's got a fan's output directed at it.

    (2) "What is a bit more surprising is that some manufacturers are also expanding their existing product lineups with 2 TB SSDs as NAND prices continue to fall"....

    Eh? Hmmmmmm....so Mr. Shilov, what's the logic here?
    It's pretty obvious that as NAND prices fall, it makes larger SSD's more attractive.
    The main point to look at is $/GB.

    As one can see from reading Anandtech's own reviews (by other Reviewer's than Mr. Shilov), you can see that it you want >= 2TB of storeage space available, in terms of internal and external drives, you're MUCH better with as much of it on SSD (Sata or PCIe) as you can afford.

    And for the 2TB value, even if a lot of laptops don't have this available internally, what percentage of laptop users with machines younger than 5 years old have LESS than 2TB capacity: internal plus external?

    This idea about SSD drives was that even older models could benefit from upgrading to one.
    And about 3 years ago, anything > 512GB was quite expensive, but now, there's a huge number of very cheap 1TB models available: dirt cheap.

    Cheaper than a 1TB HDD was 6-7 years ago in fact.

    And you can get a 2TB model for not much extra.
    In many cases, if you look at the cost of putting a 1TB SSD inside, and a 1TB USD HD externally, you spend LESS getting a 2 TB model.

    Do the math, and you'll see.

    So what would be nice if someone else at Anandtech did a few more tests on 2TB models, and generate real data. And don't write stuff like this.

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