I was looking into NVMe SSDs, and came up with this.
https://www.newegg.com/intel-665p...-_-Product
PCIe NVMe 3.0 x4 Interface Speed and Capacity. Capacities up to 1TB to 2TB.
M.2 2280 Form Factor for Design Flexibility. Designed for desktops and laptops. 96-Layer, QLC, 3D NAND.
Performance: Sequential Read (up to) 2000 MB/s, Random Read (8GB Span): Up to 160,000 IOPS. Sequential Write (up to) 1925 MB/s Random Write (8GB Span): Up to 250,000 IOPS.
PCIe Performance and High Capacity - With up to 2TB capacity on a single drive, the Intel SSD 665p Series offers great value for everyday computing and mainstream gaming and content creation. The thin M.2 80mm form factor, perfect for notebooks, desktops and mobile devices, is powered by Intel's innovative QLC technology.
Intel QLC Technology Leadership - Intel QLC Technology offers performance, high capacities, quality, and reliability. The innovative floating gate architecture has tight, symmetrical layers and no cell overhead.
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I would rather go with the Adata8200Pro for not much higher price if you want 2 TB.
Both are 2280 sizes. The Adata comes with a detachable heatsink. Power consumption should not be much different either, but not sure
Why the SX8200 over the 665p? Speed?
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Why the SX8200 over the 665p? Speed?
8200 is so fast! And pretty reliable. ADATA is no small ass business
Why the SX8200 over the 665p? Speed?
But if it's one-sided and the price drops below the 665p in the next couple weeks I might consider it. It is significantly faster.
This 1 TB. For 1 TB the difference between this and the 8200 pro is 20$ (prime), if you have space get PG gammix s11 pro for 127, which has a cool looking heatsink