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Guru3D.com » News » Phison QLC based PCIe Gen 4x4 SSDs at SATA Mainstream Performance up-to 8TB

Phison QLC based PCIe Gen 4x4 SSDs at SATA Mainstream Performance up-to 8TB

by Hilbert Hagedoorn on: 01/15/2020 06:07 PM | source: cdrinfo | 1 comment(s)
Phison QLC based PCIe Gen 4x4 SSDs at SATA Mainstream Performance up-to 8TB

Phison is adding support for QLC NAND to its E16 PCIe Gen 4x4, E12 PCIe Gen 3x4, and also is showing S12 SATA controllers that use TLC NAND.

Phison’s proprietary QLC NAND controller technology enables higher SSD capacities in industry-standard form factors while meeting the performance demands of mainstream applications.

Phison’s flagship E16 series controller for PCIe Gen 4x4 NVMe SSDs can achieve up to 4TB in capacity with QLC NAND and reaches speeds of 4.9 GB/s for sequential reads and 3.8GB/s for sequential writes. The E12 series controller enables PCIe Gen 3x4 NVMe SSDs and has a capacity of up to 8TB and speeds of 3.4GB/s sequential reads, 3.0 GB/s sequential writes with QLC NAND. For the SATA interface, Phison is also demonstrating the S12 controller series SSDs with up to 16TB using QLC NAND and performance at 550MB/s sequential reads and 530MB/s sequential writes. Phison’s DRAM-less S13T controllers enable smaller form factors, have a capacity of up to 2TB, and operate at 550MB/s sequential reads and 500MB/s sequential writes.

Phison is also demonstrating its QLC enabled removable storage solutions for microSD, USB 3.2, and Thunderbolt 3, showing impressive performance on all of the interfaces.

Update: we added the press-release.

Phison Electronics, the industry's leader in flash controller and NAND storage solutions, is demonstrating mainstream performance using 4-bits per cell QLC NAND flash controllers and SSDs at the Consumer Electronics Show 2020 (CES) in Las Vegas, Nevada. In its private suite, Phison is showcasing the addition of support for QLC NAND to its already shipping E16 PCIe Gen 4x4, E12 PCIe Gen 3x4, and S12 SATA controllers that use TLC NAND. Phison's industry leading approach leverages highly successful controllers that were qualified by tier-1 OEMs, are in mass production now, and extends new SSD designs to utilize either TLC or QLC NAND. Phison's proprietary QLC NAND controller technology enables higher SSD capacities in industry standard form factors while meeting the performance demands of mainstream applications.

Phison's flagship E16 series controller for PCIe Gen 4x4 NVMe SSDs can achieve up to 4 TB in capacity with QLC NAND and reaches speeds of 4.9 GB/s for sequential reads and 3.8 GB/s for sequential writes. The E12 series controller enables PCIe Gen 3x4 NVMe SSDs and has a capacity of up to 8 TB and speeds of 3.4 GB/s sequential reads, 3.0 GB/s sequential writes with QLC NAND. For the SATA interface, Phison is also demonstrating the S12 controller series SSDs with up to 16 TB using QLC NAND and performance at 550 MB/s sequential reads and 530 MB/s sequential writes. Phison's DRAM-less S13T controllers enable smaller form factors, have a capacity of up to 2 TB, and operate at 550 MB/s sequential reads and 500 MB/s sequential writes.

Below you can have a peek at the spec sheets.



Phison QLC based PCIe Gen 4x4 SSDs at SATA Mainstream Performance up-to 8TB Phison QLC based PCIe Gen 4x4 SSDs at SATA Mainstream Performance up-to 8TB Phison QLC based PCIe Gen 4x4 SSDs at SATA Mainstream Performance up-to 8TB Phison QLC based PCIe Gen 4x4 SSDs at SATA Mainstream Performance up-to 8TB Phison QLC based PCIe Gen 4x4 SSDs at SATA Mainstream Performance up-to 8TB Phison QLC based PCIe Gen 4x4 SSDs at SATA Mainstream Performance up-to 8TB Phison QLC based PCIe Gen 4x4 SSDs at SATA Mainstream Performance up-to 8TB




« Samsung T7 Touch Portable SSD (With a Fingerprint Sensor) is Out · Phison QLC based PCIe Gen 4x4 SSDs at SATA Mainstream Performance up-to 8TB · IBM Doubles Its Quantum Computing Volume at 28-qubits »

geogan
Senior Member



Posts: 812
Joined: 2010-01-04

#5751638 Posted on: 01/17/2020 11:58 AM
What?

8TB SSD storage over PCIE4....
or 16TB SSD storage over old SATA ???

Didn't know these sizes were possible... they must be extremely costly are they? Or are those only theoretical limits of these controllers and don't actually exist?

Would love to replace my big noisy 10TB enterprise HDs with quiet, faster SSD storage TBH.

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