Samsung 860 QVO SSDs 1TB, 2TB and 4TB Spotted At Really Low Prices
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Laci
Soon the time will come to swap my 3 TB HDDs for SSDs π
EDIT:
Did someone of you guys here ever had an SSD that failed due to stated MTBF has been reached? I cannot imagine this happening to a regular consumer after at least 10 years of usage.
Petr V
Good News but i already swap my laptop hdd to WD blue 3d nand
and itβs working great.
Ricepudding
N0Name
My Samsung Evo 840 250 GB failed on me. At first I had some issue on Debian accessing some sectors, then after couple of reboots / days it didn't even get detected by BIOS. It was my first SSD, dunno about TBW/MTBF but I did rode that drive (and my new PRO's) hard, with all these libraries with thousands of files etc. also with compiled files etc. written / read / deleted "all the time".
Samsung replaced it with 850 Evo, works fine and still in use today. Doubt that was TBW issue, but I didn't checked status of that drive either. Well it should be under threshold as warranty would be void.
Just for reference my 1.5 year old Samsung 960 Pro 2TB according to spec has: 5 Years or 1200 TBW, drive that I do have 2 OS (Win / Debian) and do still same work / daily compilations / updates large libraries like i.e. Android SDK / NDK etc. has now 12.5 TBW. My Samsung 850 Pro 500 Gig has 14.5 TBW of 300 (and 10 year warranty, dunno why 960 has only 5).
The point that I want to make is that even with QLC I think most users, even those that use drives more intensively, will be fine with them. Initially I was also sceptical but seeing how my current quota / use cases these new 4TB drive will be ideal to replace 2x4TB WD Green and 1x6TB WD Blue, although price, even after "drop", is still high even very. Being able to purchase 4TB for 250-300 euro would be instant buy for me, at least 3 units, because that Blue drive is noisier then Greens and helium Red, with according to the spec supposed to be more quiet then Blue, was actually lauder even on idle.
For now sleeping drive when idle works wonders, kinda headache to wake them up (5-10 sec up time) but silence is worth this inconvenience.
To me these QLC drives are ideal for mass storage media and are something that I was looking forward for long time now (in "affordable price range" of course).
Funny thing is that all this time none of my HDD (all WD's) did actually failed on me, not even single HDD failure, well I did killed one intentionally for RMA but that's different story π, SSD did ...
Humanoid_1
3DNews.ru SSD Test. They have done one of those drives (near the top of the, google translated page, there is a grey "Content" bar, click it for table of contents for that page):
Western Digital Blue 3D NAND 250 GB
Claimed resource - 100 TB (TBW)
Endurance test scores - 82 TB
It started having errors after just 54 TB written! I'm sorry to say it was one of the worst results they have had.
Please bear in mind that the one they had "could" have been a bit of a lemon, but I'd keep back ups of your data if you do end up doing a lot of writes. Depending on use it would still take a long time to reach even 50TB of writes.
I always check that site before buying a new SSD and they are keeping it updated all the time too π
Some time ago I found a Russian site that is doing the most extensive SSD endurance test I have found anywhere - Margalus
Humanoid_1
airbud7
$127.98 for 1TB on the egg
Humanoid_1
anub1s18
go4brendon
Picked up a 1TB 970 EVO M2 on Tuesday from Amazon for Β£175 ($225) absolute bargain
Humanoid_1
slyphnier
probably this good replacement for storage drive
although need some feedback for people usage with these SSD
people that reporting SSD 5+years still fine
SSD back 5years or older is much better quality as the NAND using SLC/MLC
SLC and MLC endurance is far more higher than TLC/QLC
but as the capacity is much bigger nowdays, it help with write amplification
much lower write on same cell... but still i bet it wont last as good as MLC SSD
fry178
@Humanoid_1
Problem is with NAND, it is not usually the amount of TBW that kills them, but rather age..
+1
i've been saying this for a while, as backblaze data was showing the same thing (after 2-3y roughly 25% of drives had chip failure from age, not writes).
i keep replacing them after about 2-3y with newer/bigger drives, but did have no issues with the "big names" i used (crucial/ocz/kingston/toshiba),
but had a "myssd" were the controller failed within a year. was the OS drive at the time, so no data loss as i use trueimage.
i will go back to drives with mlc chips, as the qlc drive i just got is terribly slow (even with slc/dram cache),
and i dont like them cranking up bits per cell every year and no real long term data showing the chips last.
airbud7
is this the drive were discussing?
https://i.postimg.cc/fLD98v7M/SSD-1.png
seems like a good deal either way?
Humanoid_1
The description seems a little off, but hey, 3 bit MLC should be a better option anyway. At that price it is a damn fine buy either way I think π
Ridiric
Humanoid_1
slyphnier
Ridiric