Intel 750 NVMe 1.2 TB PCIe SSD Review
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Loobyluggs
erm, lol?
I had to check the date to make sure it wasn't the 1st of April...that is beyond insane speed.
It's so fast, I'm betting someone will link the ludicrous speed youtube clip from space balls.
Undying
Sure thing, its fast but it does comes with premium price. 1,08β¬ / GB is just damn expensive.
BLEH!
One of these work on X58?
poornaprakash
Unbelievable !!!!!!!
This is simply unbelievable performance from an SSD. Good review form Hilbert.
ruiner13
So... if you need a tester, I'm game... π
Solfaur
Great review!
Just a little typo on page 2. π€
This is probably one of the biggest performance leaps in PC hardware industry for quite a while, I know the price is crazy right now, but so are the gains and it's only the start. What Intel did was to create a stock flagship, which will I'm sure be refined by other manufacturers in the not so distant future. I can already see some crazy good looking shrouds and PCB colors on these SSDs, to fit for those fancy windowed cases. :eyebrows:
This monster (or another version of it) is most certainly on my wishlist for my next build, it's a huge jump and Intel knows it.
Hilbert Hagedoorn
Administrator
StewieTech
My god these speeds make me so horny. My next from-the-scratch build will have one of these for sure. :stewpid:
citrix13
Hilbert, can you guys get your hands on a Samsung SM 951 SSD for the next review, so we can compare it to to the Intel 750 SSD, thank you.
Solfaur
riot83
How much of the PCIe bandwidth do these take and how would these affect gaming or if you have like a sli/xfire setup? I know that during gaming a lot of drive reading isn't required but if there was something in background using the sd would if affect the fps or something? Just qurious.
Hilbert Hagedoorn
Administrator
CrazY_Milojko
Speed of this monster is just insane, but dat price for 1.2TB model... π
atm I'm more than satisfied with performance and capacity of my Intel 520 120GB SSD just for OS, drivers and most used programs.
Few years from now guess that speed furies like this Intel 750 1.2TB will become common thing in world of SSD storage, and much more friendly for the wallet of all of us.
CrazY_Milojko
Hilbert Hagedoorn
Administrator
In theory it would work, but you'd run into challenges.
1) No UEFI means it is not bootable. If used as secondary storage unit, that would work.
2) You cut the peak bandwidth in half
PCI-Express 2.0 sends 500 MB/s per direction & lane -- PCI-Express 3.0 brings that number towards 1 GB/s per direction per lane. This card uses 4 lanes thus PCI-Express 3.0 = Max 4 GB/sec and PCI-Express 2.0 would cut that in half to 2 GB/sec.
You'd still see insane speeds, but with a certain drop-off in read perf and + not bootable + more limited with complex workloads where you read and write at the same time.
http://www.guru3d.com/index.php?ct=articles&action=file&id=15552
So above you can see PCI-Express 3.0
http://www.guru3d.com/index.php?ct=articles&action=file&id=15567
And here you can see PCI-Express 2.0
HeavyHemi
http://i.imgur.com/IU4zY7r.jpg?1
It's tech like this that is seriously getting my upgrade itch going...
BLEH!
Prince Valiant
Pale Rider
Another great review, Hilbert!
Wasn't it Intel that said something like, there's no longer a limit as to the size of SSD's?
I was just wondering, what is the price difference between a piece of green PCB and a matching piece in black, or other colors?
Is cost of materiel the limiting factor in using different colors of PCB's, or is there some other reason manufacturers choose to go with the all too common green PCB?
XP-200
Those prices. π±