Review: AMD Radeon R7 Series SSD
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undeadpolice
https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/facefrontier/faces/orig/27.jpg
And I like the cover sticker as well
Ven0m
Thanks for the review, Hilbert.
This SSD looks really great. While it's not the cheapest one around, it doesn't cost as much as Sandisk Extreme Pro.
Aoyagi
Not bad.
However, I have a question: Are you ever going to test the actual Toshiba SSDs? You know, the Q Series PRO? I'd like to know how do they compare to these now as well.
Hari_Seldon
Seems like a good drive.
Question: samsung evo drives shows bad results in degradation test, but Samsung magician (software that came with them) has an "performance optimization" option that can be run manually. Does this improve the results on that test or real life use?
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Notes:
1- there is an error in hardware used: "8 GB (4x 4096 MB) DDR3 2133 MHZ"
2. Sorry for my english, my native language is spanish.
GhostXL
http://i61.tinypic.com/2ef5bi8.jpg
RAPID Mode actually uses your spare system memory to help speed up the drive.
Minimum requirement for RAPID mode is 2GB recommended 4GB free, I would recommend at the minimum an 8GB machine, 16GB is perfect.
So the faster the memory, and better the bandwidth, the more of a boost you will get from RAPID mode.
Over provisioning increases lifespan and also performance, thus the crazy increase in Random Read/Write (IOPS).
I ran the CrystalDisk benchmark last, which is probably why it has the higher numbers for reads/writes.
With the recommended over-provision on my Samsung 840 EVO 1TB, and RAPID Mode enabled I get the following when I bench from multiple programs.
SHS
I wouldn't recommended any one any thing made by OCZ past history ever again and as for AMD SDD well they just shot them self in foot now that I know this by picking one of worse manufacturer of all time and Toshiba was dumb enough for acquisition them that going fellow them around for min years to come and if I was you smart way to go with Corsair, Samsung or SanDisk.
GhostXL
---TK---
SSD_PRO
GhostXL
sykozis
Hilbert Hagedoorn
Administrator
http://nl.guru3d.com/ocz-return-rates.jpg
Now I am not evangelizing OCZ here, but some users attach the company because of a bad experience, and that is uncalled for as the latest return rates clearly indicate.
I really didn't want to say anything to your initial post as I feel strongle that everybody can voice their opinion. It didn't sit well with me, so I wanted to explain something to you. My comment however is based on your remark before you edited it.
Yes OCZ has had problems with up-to the Vertex 3 series mostly, Sandforce products had proven to not be reliable enough. The result have been RMA rates topped to 3% which is incredibly high.
Ever since OCZ has purchased Indilinx, the use of barefoot controllers not only give them great performance, but reliability increased towards incredible levels as well. What I am trying to say is that you can't keep throwing back old stuff like that, they moved away from the technology to harmed them and their end-users. I consider the new barefoot based SSDs paired with Toshiba NAND to be among the best in the business. VERY reliable, VERY fast.
I have a chart here for you that should interest you, and have a look at the current RMA rates with their Indilinx / Toshiba based products.
---TK---
BLEH!
Is this drive comparable with the 512 GB Vertex 4? Tempted to RAID0 2 x 512 (480) GB SSDs when I build my X99 rig 😀
Darkest
I've used a bunch of OCZ products in the past and never had a problem, some of which are fairly recent (Agility 3 SSD's and a OCZ ZS 550W PSU). Both of the products I've used recently have been fantastic, and both reviewed well. Toshiba is a fantastic company, and I'm glad to see them going forward with OCZ into the future. There's a lot of people that tend to get a proverbial stick up their backsides regarding certain tech' companies, often over a small number of issues. The fact is, if you look at ANY company you will find problems at some point. They all go through them, nobody is infallible.
I'll end with saying that my next SSD will most likely be a Indilinx/Toshiba/OCZ drive, which in turn means it'll probably have an AMD label slapped on it. This of course depends on the price to a point, but the prices I've seen so far seem to be well in line with what I would expect to pay for a product like this.
PS: Thanks for the review Hilbert!
---TK---
Found the review with 840 evo with and without rapid mode that I was talking about earlier. Not very impressive to be honest. For anyone interested.
http://techreport.com/review/25282/a-closer-look-at-rapid-dram-caching-on-the-samsung-840-evo-ssd