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Guru3D.com » Review » Mach Xtreme DS Turbo 120GB SSD review » Page 2

Mach Xtreme DS Turbo 120GB SSD review - Specifications and architecture

by Hilbert Hagedoorn on: 08/23/2011 02:00 PM [ ] 0 comment(s)

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Specifications and architecture

We stated it several times, the SATA II controller that we all love and got accustomed to so much is a bottleneck for the latest generation of SSDs as they were literally hitting the upper plafond in terms of performance. We've now physically and mechanically reached that threshold. With the initially slow adoption rate towards SATA 3 implementation on motherboards, effectively the bandwidth your storage device can work in has doubled up, and believe it or not ... that's great but still not enough for the years to come as SSD performance over the coming year or two will take an even larger leap in peak performance.

We have stated it many times and explained this quite a bit, but the seek time on SSD drives is insane; nothing short of amazing, at less than 1ms -- 0.1ms as we actually can measure. The average seek time for a traditional HDD is roughly 9ms. Do the math, hey, no more moving and spinning mechanical components is the key here.

The traditional HDD is a limiting factor on the overall PC experience. Also, storage performance like this will, for example, greatly enhance load times of Photoshop, Generic applications, Office, games load times, and even simple stuff like browsing the web will become a much faster experience.

But let's move onwards to the SSD itself.

Specifications and architecture

Here's where we'll look a little deeper inside the actual product. The MX-DS TURBO SSD is an SSD based on MLC NAND (25nm) asynchronous flash memory.

A big difference is that the new generation SSDs use that new SATA 3 interface. The end result here is that you'll get a storage unit with a massive IO performance, peaking up-to say 550 MB/sec in read performance and a scorching 510 MB/sec write performance.

Currently there are two types of the NAND Flash interface. The asynchronous one is similar to the regular SRAM interface, the other one is synchronous DDR interface; it is available in two flavors – Source Synchronous DDR and Toggle Mode DDR. The Source Synchronous DDR is a solution proposed by ONFI , while the Toggle Mode DDR is used by Samsung in their memory ICs. DDR interface offers higher performance than the asynchronous interface.

Now, always bare in mind that a manufacturer loves to show you the burst / maximum peak performance, not average. Regardless of that fact, which we'll show you in the benchmark sessions, this storage unit is just extremely fast.

Interface: SATA 6Gb/s
Max Sequential Read/Write (using ATTO Disk Benchmark): 555 MB/s sequential read — 510 MB/s sequential write
Max Random 4k Write (using IOMeter 08): 85k IOPS (4k aligned)
Technology: Asynchronous NAND
SSD Unformatted Capacity: 120 GB
  • Interface: SATA 3 6Gb/s
  • Storage technology: Asynchronous NAND
  • Operating temperature: 0° C to +70° C
  • Storage temperature: -20° C to +85° C
  • Operating Humidity: 10% to 90% RH (0° to +40° C)
  • Maximum Operating Altitude: 3,048 m (up to 10,000 ft.)
  • Maximum Non-Operative Altitude: 12,192 m (up to 40,000 ft.)
  • SATA 3 6Gb/s
  • Backward compatible with SATA II and SATA I
  • Microsoft® Windows® 7, Vista®, and XP; Macintosh OS X; Linux
  • 2.5" or 3.5" hard drive bay
  • 3.5" adapter for desktop PCs included

The MX-DS TURBO series SSD will become available in three volume sizes: 120, 180, 240 and even 480 GB. Mach covers the unit with a 3 year warranty (carry in). MX-Extreme lists their product with 5+ year lifetime.

To understand the product we'll need to realize that there are primary technologies embedded into the storage unit. As such we'll continue the technology coverage in two stages:

  1. The SSD partitions paired with controller
  2. SATA III 6 Gbit interface

We'll explain each one in a simple manner.

Mach Extreme DS Turbo SSD




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Mach Xtreme MX Express SSD Review
Mach Xtreme MX Express released their PCI Express SSD, and we review it. Designed and based on PCI Express 2.0 x2/x4/x16 slot, the newcomers are 128 GB, 256 GB, 512 GB and 1,024 GB SSDs powered by SandForce controllers.

Mach Xtreme DS Turbo 120GB SSD review
Today we look at an offering from Mach Technology (MX technology), they added no less than four new SATA 3 (SATA 3 6Gs) SSDs in their MX DS Turbo lineup, in 120GB, 180, 240GB and even 480MB capacities, all SATA 3 of course. The SSD drives come with that already prominent SandForce SF-2281 controller to deliver up to 555 MBps read and 510 MBps write speeds (when peaking).

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