Intel taps 3D NAND to push PCIe-based SSDs into the mainstream
Why settle for SATA?
The best bang-for-buck when shopping for a solid state drive is still found in the SATA 6Gbps category, but it will only be a matter of time before PCIe-based SSDs come down in price. To get the ball rolling, Intel announced half a dozen new models equipped with its 3D triple-level cell (TLC) NAND flash memory.
Intel's new drives take aim at different market segments from the embedded category all the way up to data centers. The one that's of most interest to home consumers at large is the 600p series.
These aren't enthusiast grade solutions that push the performance envelope, though compared to SATA 6Gbps drives, they're rated to run markedly faster, at least in read performance. Just as importantly, the price points of the new drives make them accessible to anyone with a motherboard supporting M.2 drives and who wants to leave behind the performance bottleneck of SATA.
Here's how pricing breaks down:
- Intel 600p 128GB (M.2): $69 (~$0.54 per gigabyte)
- Intel 600p 256GB (M.2): $104 (~$0.41 per gigabyte)
- Intel 600p 512GB (M.2): $189 (~$0.40 per gigabyte)
- Intel 600p 1,024GB (M.2): $359 (~$0.35 per gigabyte)
As is often the case, the higher capacity drives offer the best value, culminating in the 1TB drive, which is priced at around $0.35 per gigabyte.
Performance also scales with capacity; each larger capacity drive is faster than the ones below it. Here's at look at the rated performance in order of sequential read, sequential write, random read IOPS, and random write IOPS:
- 128GB: 770MB/s, 450MB/s, 35,000 IOPS, 91,000 IOPS
- 256GB: 1,570MB/s, 540MB/s, 71,000 IOPS, 112,000 IOPS
- 512GB: 1,775 MB/s, 560MB/s, 128,500 IOPS, 128,000 IOPS
- 1,024GB: 1,800 MB/s, 560MB/s, 155,000 IOPS, 128,000 IOPS
Pricing is competitive compared to other NVMe SSDs, though we've seen better performance metrics, particularly from Samsung's 950 Pro and OCZ / Toshiba's RD400 models. It's also worth pointing out that Intel will at some point release its Optane SSDs, which promise to kick performance up several notches.
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Still, the 600p series is an interesting release and one that could help bring wider adoption of NVMe SSDs. The most direct equivalent is Samsung's OEM-only PM951 NVMe drives, which still cost more and don't have a 1TB capacity option. Overall, this is good news for anyone hoping to see improved pricing for M.2 NVMe solutions.
Paul has been playing PC games and raking his knuckles on computer hardware since the Commodore 64. He does not have any tattoos, but thinks it would be cool to get one that reads LOAD"*",8,1. In his off time, he rides motorcycles and wrestles alligators (only one of those is true).