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1TB Team Group MP33 M.2 NVMe PCIe 3D Internal SSD Expired

$64
$99.99
+ Free Shipping
+39 Deal Score
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Newegg has 1TB Team Group MP33 M.2 NVMe PCIe 3D Internal Solid State Drive (TM8FP6001T0C101) for $63.99. Shipping is free.

Thanks to Deal Hunter PennyFound for finding this deal.

Product Features:
  • PCI-e interface - Supports latest NVMe 1.3 protocol
  • M.2 2280 specification: Supports the next-generation platforms of Intel and AMD. Suitable for both desktop and notebook
  • Supports SLC Caching technology
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Edited July 2, 2022 at 08:46 AM by
Newegg.com [newegg.com] has 1TB Team Group MP33 M.2 NVMe PCIe 3.0 SSD on sale for $63.99. Shipping is free.
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$64
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Last Edited by StrawMan86 | Staff July 2, 2022 at 08:54 AM

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Read 1800 Mbps
Write 1500 Mbps
Edited to clear up any confusion.
I have three Teamgroup 1TB SATA SSD's .

First one in a PS4 that shows no real improvement over the stock drive. I even cleaned any dust from the unit when putting the new drive in but the fan now runs louder now than ever before.

Second one as a data only drive in an old personal PC relegated to Temporary File Storage (aka poor mans file server). This is used 95% for just data retrieval, and it is bad (per their SSD Testing software) within a year. I had no need to encrypt it as it was in a locked server room in my house and I have had several issues w Bitlocker at the Enterprise level at work. It is now read only w a lifetime of both personal data and PHI on it, so I cannot ship it back. I explained this to them but it appears I am out of luck unless I ship that drive, with all that readable data exposed, from the US to Taiwan.

The 3rd one I have not installed yet and, based on the other two, I'll just eat the cost on that one and chalk this purchase up to experience at trying to get away w inexpensive storage vs the Samsungs I have everywhere else.

So, in short, you do get what you pay for when buying off brands. Personally, I'll be spending the few extra dollars even for cheap, basic applications, for name brand, reliable drives from now on.
How did you use it in a PS4?

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JohnnyRingo315
07-06-2022 at 02:02 AM.
07-06-2022 at 02:02 AM.
Quote from clinteastwood :
How did you use it in a PS4?
It wasn't my PS4 and I know little about them. I just put the drive in for the kid but I followed the video on YouTube. IIRC, it had me back up the PS4 then download the factory image from Sony's website to a USB drive. After I swapped the mechanical drive out w the SSD and blew any dust out, I used the USB to install the stock OS. I then restored the backup. Everything worked fine except for a few sign-ins.
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Last edited by JohnnyRingo315 July 6, 2022 at 02:24 AM.
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JohnnyRingo315
07-06-2022 at 02:13 AM.
07-06-2022 at 02:13 AM.
Quote from tropicalb :
The first thing I do after installing any hard drive is to encrypt it. You could use Bitlocker, VeraCrypt or Linux Unified Key setup (LUKS) on Linux (some examples). Then, run a SMART test on the drive or run other diagnostics/stress tests to ensure it doesn't die out from "infant mortality". If the drive is really bad quality, these stress tests should cause it to fail if it is a dud and poor quality.

After doing those tests I am reasonably confident it will last a while. Then I can use it for data and if the drive fails within the warranty, because the data is encrypted, I have no concerns sending it in for RMA/replacement. If they can decrypt my data, they can have it! Big Grin
This drive sits in an old Windows10 Desktop w a bunch of installed programs, so I just locked it in my server room and relegated it to file storage until I had time to get all the programs and data transferred of it. I didn't bother encrypting it, especially w Bitlocker as I had to sweat out recovering more than a few Bitlocker randomly locked drives before. I did stress test it and it passed. I have the drive backed up on my NAS w WD Reds so, my only real issue is my viewable personal data on it but at this point I'll just remove the read only attribute on the drive and write zeros to it with DDRescue and see what happens. I didn't anticipate the drive failing as a storage drive or, as you mentioned I would have encrypted it.
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Last edited by JohnnyRingo315 July 6, 2022 at 02:37 AM.
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JohnnyRingo315
07-06-2022 at 02:17 AM.
07-06-2022 at 02:17 AM.
Quote from Billyteddy :
What do you use for personal file server
The drive in question was sitting in my old Windows10 Desktop w all my tax software etc ... It was relegated to only light file storage as I never got a chance to transfer all the programs off it. However, to answer your question, I use
XigmaNAS for my NAS w WD Reds and Debian for all my other servers in VMs.
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Last edited by JohnnyRingo315 July 6, 2022 at 02:37 AM.
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seanleeforever
07-06-2022 at 08:28 AM.
07-06-2022 at 08:28 AM.
Quote from JohnnyRingo315 :
It wasn't my PS4 and I know little about them. I just put the drive in for the kid but I followed the video on YouTube. IIRC, it had me back up the PS4 then download the factory image from Sony's website to a USB drive. After I swapped the mechanical drive out w the SSD and blew any dust out, I used the USB to install the stock OS. I then restored the backup. Everything worked fine except for a few sign-ins.

Pephase you shouldn't give advice to something you have no idea about.
What you described is a sata ssd. This is nvme ssd. PS4 does not enev have m.2 interface to plug this drive in. And PS5 doesn't even take anything less than pcie gen 4, so you cannot get this to work on ANY PLAYSTATION to begin with

By extension, I cam conclude thay you might have bought some sata ssd, included one you installed for your nas.

You might have a bad experience with some other product this company produces, while it is still a valide opinion, it does not apply directly to this product
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JohnnyRingo315
07-06-2022 at 10:02 AM.
07-06-2022 at 10:02 AM.
Quote from seanleeforever :
Pephase you shouldn't give advice to something you have no idea about.
What you described is a sata ssd. This is nvme ssd. PS4 does not enev have m.2 interface to plug this drive in. And PS5 doesn't even take anything less than pcie gen 4, so you cannot get this to work on ANY PLAYSTATION to begin with

By extension, I cam conclude thay you might have bought some sata ssd, included one you installed for your nas.

You might have a bad experience with some other product this company produces, while it is still a valide opinion, it does not apply directly to this product

You are correct, my drives were SATA SSD and I wasn't giving advice. My orig comments were meant to be re: Teamgroup quality in general. I prob should have been clearer on that. My NAS drives are all 24/7 WD Reds and I have no issue w those.
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