Guru3D.com
  • HOME
  • NEWS
    • Channels
    • Archive
  • DOWNLOADS
    • New Downloads
    • Categories
    • Archive
  • GAME REVIEWS
  • ARTICLES
    • Rig of the Month
    • Join ROTM
    • PC Buyers Guide
    • Guru3D VGA Charts
    • Editorials
    • Dated content
  • HARDWARE REVIEWS
    • Videocards
    • Processors
    • Audio
    • Motherboards
    • Memory and Flash
    • SSD Storage
    • Chassis
    • Media Players
    • Power Supply
    • Laptop and Mobile
    • Smartphone
    • Networking
    • Keyboard Mouse
    • Cooling
    • Search articles
    • Knowledgebase
    • More Categories
  • FORUMS
  • NEWSLETTER
  • CONTACT

New Reviews
be quiet Pure Loop 2 FX 280mm LCS review
HP FX900 1 TB NVMe Review
Scythe FUMA2 Rev.B CPU Cooler review
SK Hynix Platinum P41 2TB M.2 NVMe SSD Review
Corsair K70 RGB PRO Mini Wireless review
MSI MPG A1000G - 1000W PSU Review
Goodram IRDM PRO M.2 SSD 2 TB NVMe SSD Review
Samsung T7 Shield Portable 1TB USB SSD review
DeepCool LS720 (LCS) review
Fractal Design Pop Air RGB Black TG review

New Downloads
Display Driver Uninstaller Download version 18.0.5.4
FurMark Download v1.31
Intel HD graphics Driver Download Version: 31.0.101.3222
Intel ARC graphics Driver Download Version: 30.0.101.1743
AMD Radeon Software Adrenalin 22.7.1 driver download
GeForce 516.93 WHQL Studio driver download
Corsair Utility Engine Download (iCUE) Download v4.26.110
ReShade download v5.3.0
AIDA64 Download Version 6.75
7-Zip v22.01 Download


New Forum Topics
Nvidia reduces revenue prediction due to video card demand. FSR not doing its thingy "Core Isolation" and "Memory Integrity" settings missing from Device Security in Windows 11 Virtual reality fps mystery? AMD video cards paired with AMD vs Intel? At Least One AIB Halts Production ARC Graphics cards - Is ARC Doomed? In Win Chopin MAX 3.3-liter Mini-ITX case with 54mm CPU height Intel Core i9-13900K with and without power management settings Razer released gaming chairs inspired by Williams and Koenigsegg (at 1299 USD) Is Windows 11 "Ghost Spectre" really an improvement for gaming?




Guru3D.com » Review » HP S750 SSD 1TB review » Page 1

HP S750 SSD 1TB review - Introduction

by Hilbert Hagedoorn on: 09/28/2020 11:52 AM [ 4] 6 comment(s)

Tweet

HP SSD S750 1TB 2.5" Review (SATA3)

Granted, NVMe SSDs are where it's at in this business. But add-in SATA3 based SSDs still can make a lot of sense for your movies, or game collection if priced right of course. BiWin, the company that fabricates HP SSDs (and other products), has more recently announced the HP S750 2.5-inch SSD Series. Available in 256GB, 512GB, and 1TB, these drives have been fitted with new 96-layer NAND and reach read speeds up to 560 MB/sec.  Even the smallest version reaches 520 MB/sec on writes with IOPS 4K writes being in an 80K range. These SSDs are low lower, in idle they consume just 0.4 Watts and in full use roughly 2 Watts. The units are backed with a three-year warranty, the TBW values correspondingly in volume size are 160 TBW, 320 TBW, and 650 TBW for the 1TB model. I am awaiting confirmation on pricing. 

The series offers decent enough speed (for a SATA3 unit) and remains competitive in pricing. As you guys know, we've been testing NAND Flash-based storage ever since the very beginning, and it is surprising to see where we have gotten. The SSD market is fierce and crowded though. While stability and safety of your data have become a number one priority for the manufacturers, the technology keeps advancing at as fast a pace as it does, the performance numbers a good SSD offers these days are simply breathtaking! You get between 450 MB/s to 500 MB/sec on SATA3 which is the norm for a single controller based SSD. Next to that, over the past year, NAND flash memory (the storage memory used inside an SSD) has become much cheaper as well. A really good SSD can be found under 25 cents per GB. With parties like Samsung, Toshiba and Micron the prices have now dropped towards and below the 20 cents per GB marker. This means that SSD technology and NAND storage has gone mainstream and due to the lower prices, the volume sizes go up as well. A couple of years ago a 64 GB SSD was hot stuff, then slowly we moved to 120 GB, last year 240 GB for an SSD in a PC was the norm, this upcoming year we'll transition slowly to roughly 1TB per SSD as the norm with sub 150 USD prices. With the market being so huge, fierce and competitive, it brought us to where we are today... nice volume SSDs at acceptable prices with very fast performance. Not one test system in my lab has a HDD anymore, everything runs on SSD while I receive and retrieve my bigger chunks of data from a NAS server here in the office. The benefits are performance, speed, low power consumption and no noise.

HP historically has been making use of Micron for the NAND memory (the company behind Crucial). These drives are based on vertically stacked NAND (also referred to as 3D NAND, even 96-layers) and are now available multiple capacities. With a low power design, this drive will be among the mainstream to fastest SSDs we have ever tested. It’s not just about performance though, these units manage 560 MB/s and write speeds of up to 520 MB/s with 4K IOPS of performance in the 75K ranges for both reads and writes. Paired towards a Proprietary but refurbished HP controller. The unit is making use of a dynamic SLC written buffer which will keep the TLC effect far away and keep performance high during high burst write workloads. HP guarantees this SSD for 3 years under warranty, that or 650 TB written.

  




20 pages 1 2 3 4 next »



Related Articles
HP S750 SSD 1TB review
We test a new HP S750 SSD series, the rather properly volume sized 1024 GB (1 TB), model which we will review. The S750 series offers a compete range of good performing storage products, yet price-com...

© 2022