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Guru3D.com » Review » TeamGroup Cardea Ceramic C440 PCIe 4.0 NVMe review » Page 1

TeamGroup Cardea Ceramic C440 PCIe 4.0 NVMe review - Introduction

by Hilbert Hagedoorn on: 08/18/2020 01:51 PM [ 4] 3 comment(s)

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TeamGroup Cardea ceramic c440 PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSD
Witchcraft - breaching that 5000 MB/sec marker

Hold on tight as we shift into sixth gear with the TeamGroup Cardea Ceramic C440 PCIe Gen 4 x4 SSDNVMe. This bad boy reaches super fast transfer rates passing 5 GB/sec. Put it into a Ryzen 3000 / B550/X570 based PC, and witchcraft happens as you are operating at 4000 to 5000 MB/s for reads and writes, thanks to the new PCIe 4.0 interface and a bit of TLC with Phison, well Kioxia strictly speaking.

In the past half-year or so you'll have seen a few PCIe Gen 4.0 related announcements. Of course, the dazzling numbers from SSDs at that speed do impress. Teamgroup released the Cardea Ceramic C440 at roughly 20 Cents per GB, and you can purchase it in a 1TB and 2TB model, the C440 units will be available at 199 USD for the 1TB version. The specifications look great, the numbers dazzling, but will this unit deliver what it claims? As filling up ye 'ol data-driven bus with 4 maybe even 5 GB/s speeds, is a difficult challenge. The SSD comes in an M.2 package. Using the PCIe lanes interface it is so much more capable as it can deal with way more bandwidth using PCI-Express lanes Gen 4.0. As such, M.2 solutions are intended for high-end and enthusiast-class motherboards and similarly positioned laptops.

  • Max Sequential Read - Up to 5000 MBps
  • Max Sequential Write - Up to 4400 MBps
  • 4KB Random Read - Up to 750K IOPS (QD32)
  • 4KB Random Write - Up to 750K IOPS (QD32)
  • Endurance 1TB / >1,800TB and 2TB / >3,600TB
  • Warranty 5-Years

While the 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. In the year 2018 by combining advanced NAND Flash controller with PCIe Gen3 (8Gb/s) x 4, NvMe 1.3 interface and 3D NAND Flash, PCIe M.2 delivers sequential read speed up to 3200MB/s, and sequential write speed up to 1500MB/s. It is now 2020, and PCIe Gen 4 NvMe 1.3 is also here, offering closer to 5 GB/s performance - ranges and that is factor 10 over the SATA3 SSD.

A couple of years ago a 128 GB SSD was hot stuff, then slowly we moved to 256 GB, last year 512 GB for an SSD in a PC was the norm, this upcoming year we'll transition slowly to roughly Multi-TB SSDs as the norm. With the market being so huge, fierce and competitive, it brought us to where we are today... excellent volume SSDs at acceptable prices with high-speed performance. We'll inspect the product PCB and components later on in the review in detail. This unit uses vertically stacked NAND (also referred to as 3D NAND) and is now available multiple capacities. With a low power design, this drive will be among the mainstream to fastest SSDs we have ever tested.

   

Type Solid State modules (SSM)
Form factor M.2 2280
Controller Phison PS5016-E16, 8 channels
Interface M.2/M-Key (PCIe 4.0 x4)
Read 5000MB/s
Write 4400MB/s
IOPS 4K read/Write 750k/750k
Memory modules 3D-NAND TLC, 96 Layer (BiCS5)
TBW 1.8PB
Reliability prediction 1.7 Mio. hours (MTBF)
Cache 1GB (DDR4), SLC-Cache
Protocol NVMe 1.3

 

The SSD is a Non-Volatile Memory Express (NVMe 1.3) M.2 form factor SSD; it has been fitted with new Vertically stacked NAND (new 96-layer BiCS)  TLC. The performance numbers of a proper SATA3 SSD offers these days are simply excellent, but with the more niche NVMe SSDs, you can easily quadruple performance, which offers serious numbers. The unit follows a smaller M.2 2280 form factor (8cm), so it will fit on most ATX motherboards capable of M.2 just fine. 

Ceramic?
Ceramic layers have been used in the aerospace industry a lot, as a heat shield, tied to a small external faint should be able to achieve better heat dissipation. Anyway, do you want to see how fast the C440 is? Next page and onwards into the review then.




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