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Product Name: | Team Group CX2 2.5" 1TB SATA III 3D NAND Internal Solid State Drive (SSD) T253X6001T0C101 |
Product Description: | Advanced SLC Caching technology. 4 times faster The advanced SLC Caching algorithm technology makes its read/write speed easily 4 times[1] faster than traditional hard drives. A must-have upgrade to keep up with the times Different from traditional mechanical hard drive, the CX2 with innovative and bold design uses FLASH technology with low power consumption and high-speed transfer features. It is the best choice for replacing traditional hard drives. Shock and drop resistant for safe use. Quiet and lightweight CX2 Solid state drives are shock and drop resistant (1500G/0.5ms) and do not make annoying mechanical noises. It can also effectively avoid computer crash due to kicking. Wear-Leveling prolongs the service life greatly The powerful Wear-Leveling technology and ECC (Error Correction Code) function enhance the reliability of data transfer and prolong the service life of the SSD. Specification Interface SATA Rev. 3.0 (6Gb/s) — with backwards compatibility to SATA Rev. 2.0 Capacity 256GB / 512GB / 1TB[2] Voltage DC +5V Operation Temperature 0°C ~ 70°C Storage Temperature -40°C ~ 85°C Terabyte Written 256GB / >60TB 512GB / >120TB 1TB / >240TB[3] Performance Crystal Disk Mark: 256GB Read/Write: up to 520/430 MB/s 512GB Read/Write: up to 530/470 MB/s 1TB Read/Write: up to 540/490 MB/s[4] Dimensions 100(L) x 69.9(W) x 7(H) mm Humidity 0°C ~ 55°C / 5% ~ 95% RH, non-condensing Vibration 20G (non-operating) Shock 1,500G MTBF 2,000,000 hours Operating System Windows 10 / 8.1 / 8 / 7 / Vista MAC OS 10.4 or later Linux 2.6.33 or later Warranty 3-year limited warranty [1] The speed was tested by TEAMGROUP and for the reference only. [1] 1GB= 1.000,000.000 Bytes. In OS system, it would be displayed as 1,000,000,000 Bytes/1024/1024/1024= 0.93GB [2] Definition and conditions of TBW (Terabytes Written) are based on JEDEC standard [3] Transmission speed will vary according to different hardware/software conditions, therefore the data can only use for basic reference. * We reserve the right to modify product specifications wit |
Product SKU: | N82E16820331561 |
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The SATA interface is more limited than a direct PCIE interface, like NVME, but it still has a place and is not going anywhere soon.
The underlying NAND flash is not different between a 2.5" SSD or a M.2 2280 form factor, so the cost can not be radically different even though the interface has very large differences. You can save on the controller costs however.
https://docs.google.com/spreadshe...edi
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank SaveMeMoneyPlease69
The 2.5" SSD is already outdated so it is expected though a little too late. Who has a modern laptop or PC that uses this form factor instead of the newer M2 2280 or NVMe these days?
If anything, the 2280 SSDs from reliable brands like Samsung and Hynix should be seeing the price drop by now, not this.
EDIT: The truth is too hard for you downvoters to accept? Do a quick Google search. The 2.5" SSD came out in 1991, 31 years ago. The M.2 came out in 2012.
https://en.wikipedia.or
https://www.crucial.com/articles/...ie-or-sata
The M.2 statement is a little heavy handed. I have a system that is only 1 year old and has a single M.2 port so I expanded it with a 500GB sata solid state and a 1TB spinning disk. Suites my needs well enough and I didn't have to toss the drive that came with the system.
The M.2 statement is a little heavy handed. I have a system that is only 1 year old and has a single M.2 port so I expanded it with a 500GB sata solid state and a 1TB spinning disk. Suites my needs well enough and I didn't have to toss the drive that came with the system.
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The SATA interface is more limited than a direct PCIE interface, like NVME, but it still has a place and is not going anywhere soon.
The underlying NAND flash is not different between a 2.5" SSD or a M.2 2280 form factor, so the cost can not be radically different even though the interface has very large differences. You can save on the controller costs however.
It makes no difference. Really, you're paying for both for the cost of one.
They gotta get rid of stick of those 16gb micro SD cards. Just think of how many they have just sitting in boxes.
The SATA interface is more limited than a direct PCIE interface, like NVME, but it still has a place and is not going anywhere soon.
The underlying NAND flash is not different between a 2.5" SSD or a M.2 2280 form factor, so the cost can not be radically different even though the interface has very large differences. You can save on the controller costs however.
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Yes. It came out after the PlayStation.
Ok.
I meant that I was unaware that they had replaceable drives.
Who downvoted this? LOL
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