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expired Posted by tDames | Staff • Mar 20, 2023
expired Posted by tDames | Staff • Mar 20, 2023

1TB Solidigm P44 Pro Series NVMe Gen4 Solid State Drive SSD

+ Free Shipping

$70

$125

44% off
Newegg
31 Comments 16,486 Views
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Deal Details
Newegg has 1TB Solidigm P44 Pro Series NVMe Gen4 Solid State Drive SSD (SSDPFKKW010X7X1) on sale for $69.99. Shipping is free.

Thanks to Deal Hunter tDames for finding this deal.

Note, product must be sold by Micro Center and fulfilled by Amazon

Features:
  • Read/Write Speed up to 7000MB/s and 6500MB/s
  • The P44 Pro is ideal for intense performance workloads where speed matters; such as gaming, content creation, video editing and data analysis.
  • PCIe Generation 4, 22mm x 80mm M.2 form factor, NVMe verson 1.4 SSD available in 512GB, 1TB and 2TB capacities.
  • High Endurance and Reliability with a five-year warranty.
  • Enhanced with optional Solidigm SynergySoftware, downloadable free of charge, the P44 Pro SSD sets a new standard in user experience for a complete client SSD solution.

Editor's Notes

Written by Discombobulated | Staff
  • About this deal:
  • About this product:
    • This SSD is rated 4.7 out of 5 stars based on 26 ratings at Amazon.
  • About this store:
No longer available
  • Micro Center via Amazon has 1TB Solidigm P44 Pro Series NVMe Gen4 Solid State Drive SSD (SSDPFKKW010X7X1) on sale for $69.99Shipping is free.

Original Post

Written by tDames | Staff
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Newegg has 1TB Solidigm P44 Pro Series NVMe Gen4 Solid State Drive SSD (SSDPFKKW010X7X1) on sale for $69.99. Shipping is free.

Thanks to Deal Hunter tDames for finding this deal.

Note, product must be sold by Micro Center and fulfilled by Amazon

Features:
  • Read/Write Speed up to 7000MB/s and 6500MB/s
  • The P44 Pro is ideal for intense performance workloads where speed matters; such as gaming, content creation, video editing and data analysis.
  • PCIe Generation 4, 22mm x 80mm M.2 form factor, NVMe verson 1.4 SSD available in 512GB, 1TB and 2TB capacities.
  • High Endurance and Reliability with a five-year warranty.
  • Enhanced with optional Solidigm SynergySoftware, downloadable free of charge, the P44 Pro SSD sets a new standard in user experience for a complete client SSD solution.

Editor's Notes

Written by Discombobulated | Staff
  • About this deal:
  • About this product:
    • This SSD is rated 4.7 out of 5 stars based on 26 ratings at Amazon.
  • About this store:
No longer available
  • Micro Center via Amazon has 1TB Solidigm P44 Pro Series NVMe Gen4 Solid State Drive SSD (SSDPFKKW010X7X1) on sale for $69.99Shipping is free.

Original Post

Written by tDames | Staff

Community Voting

Deal Score
+29
Good Deal
Visit Newegg

Price Intelligence

Model: Solidigm P44 Pro Series 1TB 3D NAND PCIe 4.0 x4 NVMe M.2 2280 Internal SSD

Deal History 

Sort: Most Recent
Post Date Sold By Sale Price Activity
09/21/23Amazon$55 popular
3
06/22/23Amazon$130
3

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Top Comments

ElatedWalrus2609
809 Posts
111 Reputation
Solidigm™ is a company formed when Intel got out of the SSD business and sold the dies to SK Hynix with the agreement that Solidgm would honor any existing Intel SSD warranties which is coming to my point.
Intel SSD had the absolute worst warranties for SSD of any other brand and that continues with the new owner although their terms only refer now to "how much use was left according to the SMART before the warranty was void" without stating what ithe threshold of the SMART might be. Intel's SSD warranty was a pitiful 370TB endurance (TBW) per TB of total drive capacity. Compare that to the TBW of Samsung or virtually every other SSD drive out there before you buy, they are many multiples higher than the Intel/Solidgm TBW. Forget the number of years as it has little bearing on what is really warranted on SSD drives. It appears that Solidgm does not plan any future updates to this part of their product line and intends to keep pumping out the rebranded Intel drives. Yes the prices are attractive and performance isn't bad, but if the warranty is any indication don't expect durability.
WenliYang
23 Posts
14 Reputation
The controller, dram and die on this drive are all sk hynix's own according to reviewer. source:https://www.tomshardware.com/revi...ssd-review

also, 370TBW, which supposedly refers to intel's 670p or similar product line, is due to the drives are QLC, and most QLC drives have relatively low TBWs. Looking at similar product lines, crucial P3(plus) is rated at 220 tbw per TB, and WD SN350 comes with a laughable 80 TBW per TB. I don't know why you think 370 TBW per TB indicates poor durability but it is actually enough for almost ten years of normal use such as office, gaming, or even system drive, which probably covers 90% of the use scenario. My current 5-year-old system drive is still at 64TB total reads and 51TB total writes and my 4-year-old game drive is at 67TB reads and 32TB writes despite I'm a heavy gamer and have my PC on for 5-10 hours on a daily basis. Most SSD drives will die from various other causes before reaching the rated TBW anyway.
jackferry
6 Posts
10 Reputation
Solidigm is what used to be Intel's flash division. Spun off.

30 Comments

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Mar 20, 2023
672 Posts
Joined Apr 2013
Mar 20, 2023
zhenz
Mar 20, 2023
672 Posts
This deal is much better than the 980 pro one.
Mar 20, 2023
9,130 Posts
Joined Nov 2013
Mar 20, 2023
Adelley
Mar 20, 2023
9,130 Posts
Quote from zhenz :
This deal is much better than the 980 pro one.
More expensive though
Mar 21, 2023
28 Posts
Joined Jun 2009

This comment has been rated as unhelpful by Slickdeals users.

Mar 21, 2023
1,449 Posts
Joined Jan 2006
Mar 21, 2023
whodiini
Mar 21, 2023
1,449 Posts
Boy, wished I held out longer instead of getting the WD 850X. FYI, this is a Hynix P41 on steroids. Blazing fast and class leading efficiency as well. Better than Samsung 980Pro, maybe speedwise on par with the new samsung 990. Worth $20 more than the SN850X, or just wait....
Mar 21, 2023
39 Posts
Joined Mar 2023
Mar 21, 2023
GOCHACHA3
Mar 21, 2023
39 Posts
Solidigm? Is it a new Brand?
Mar 21, 2023
6 Posts
Joined Dec 2013
Mar 21, 2023
jackferry
Mar 21, 2023
6 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank jackferry

Quote from GOCHACHA3 :
Solidigm? Is it a new Brand?
Solidigm is what used to be Intel's flash division. Spun off.
1
Mar 21, 2023
990 Posts
Joined Oct 2013
Mar 21, 2023
smackdownfletch
Mar 21, 2023
990 Posts
Is there a 4TB version of this?

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Mar 21, 2023
49 Posts
Joined Aug 2019
Mar 21, 2023
CyanMagic9626
Mar 21, 2023
49 Posts
Anyone can telll me which heatsink i can use with this ssd for ps5 ?
Mar 21, 2023
809 Posts
Joined Nov 2018
Mar 21, 2023
ElatedWalrus2609
Mar 21, 2023
809 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank ElatedWalrus2609

Solidigm™ is a company formed when Intel got out of the SSD business and sold the dies to SK Hynix with the agreement that Solidgm would honor any existing Intel SSD warranties which is coming to my point.
Intel SSD had the absolute worst warranties for SSD of any other brand and that continues with the new owner although their terms only refer now to "how much use was left according to the SMART before the warranty was void" without stating what ithe threshold of the SMART might be. Intel's SSD warranty was a pitiful 370TB endurance (TBW) per TB of total drive capacity. Compare that to the TBW of Samsung or virtually every other SSD drive out there before you buy, they are many multiples higher than the Intel/Solidgm TBW. Forget the number of years as it has little bearing on what is really warranted on SSD drives. It appears that Solidgm does not plan any future updates to this part of their product line and intends to keep pumping out the rebranded Intel drives. Yes the prices are attractive and performance isn't bad, but if the warranty is any indication don't expect durability.
4
4
Mar 21, 2023
15 Posts
Joined Sep 2018
Mar 21, 2023
UpbeatThread954
Mar 21, 2023
15 Posts
5 yr warranty, 750 TBW for 1TB, 1200TBW for 2 TB.

Review: https://www.tomshardware.com/revi...d-review/3

Got one. Thanks!
Last edited by UpbeatThread954 March 24, 2023 at 09:34 AM.
1
Mar 21, 2023
23 Posts
Joined Sep 2021
Mar 21, 2023
Angry_Inducer
Mar 21, 2023
23 Posts
Quote from ElatedWalrus2609 :
Solidigm™ is a company formed when Intel got out of the SSD business and sold the dies to SK Hynix with the agreement that Solidgm would honor any existing Intel SSD warranties which is coming to my point.
Intel SSD had the absolute worst warranties for SSD of any other brand and that continues with the new owner although their terms only refer now to "how much use was left according to the SMART before the warranty was void" without stating what ithe threshold of the SMART might be. Intel's SSD warranty was a pitiful 370TB endurance (TBW) per TB of total drive capacity. Compare that to the TBW of Samsung or virtually every other SSD drive out there before you buy, they are many multiples higher than the Intel/Solidgm TBW. Forget the number of years as it has little bearing on what is really warranted on SSD drives. It appears that Solidgm does not plan any future updates to this part of their product line and intends to keep pumping out the rebranded Intel drives. Yes the prices are attractive and performance isn't bad, but if the warranty is any indication don't expect durability.
The controller, dram and die on this drive are all sk hynix's own according to reviewer. source:https://www.tomshardware.com/revi...ssd-review

also, 370TBW, which supposedly refers to intel's 670p or similar product line, is due to the drives are QLC, and most QLC drives have relatively low TBWs. Looking at similar product lines, crucial P3(plus) is rated at 220 tbw per TB, and WD SN350 comes with a laughable 80 TBW per TB. I don't know why you think 370 TBW per TB indicates poor durability but it is actually enough for almost ten years of normal use such as office, gaming, or even system drive, which probably covers 90% of the use scenario. My current 5-year-old system drive is still at 64TB total reads and 51TB total writes and my 4-year-old game drive is at 67TB reads and 32TB writes despite I'm a heavy gamer and have my PC on for 5-10 hours on a daily basis. Most SSD drives will die from various other causes before reaching the rated TBW anyway.
Mar 21, 2023
569 Posts
Joined Dec 2017
Mar 21, 2023
ccs90
Mar 21, 2023
569 Posts
Quote from whodiini :
Boy, wished I held out longer instead of getting the WD 850X. FYI, this is a Hynix P41 on steroids. Blazing fast and class leading efficiency as well. Better than Samsung 980Pro, maybe speedwise on par with the new samsung 990. Worth $20 more than the SN850X, or just wait....
Why is it better then a sn850x?

Specs look about the same or worse?

Does the game mode cache loading on the 850x work?
Pro
Mar 21, 2023
4,789 Posts
Joined Aug 2010
Mar 21, 2023
b00gersugar
Pro
Mar 21, 2023
4,789 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank b00gersugar

Quote from GOCHACHA3 :
Solidigm? Is it a new Brand?
Quote from jackferry :
Solidigm is what used to be Intel's flash division. Spun off.
Quote from ElatedWalrus2609 :
Solidigm™ is a company formed when Intel got out of the SSD business and sold the dies to SK Hynix with the agreement that Solidgm would honor any existing Intel SSD warranties which is coming to my point.
Intel SSD had the absolute worst warranties for SSD of any other brand and that continues with the new owner although their terms only refer now to "how much use was left according to the SMART before the warranty was void" without stating what ithe threshold of the SMART might be. Intel's SSD warranty was a pitiful 370TB endurance (TBW) per TB of total drive capacity. Compare that to the TBW of Samsung or virtually every other SSD drive out there before you buy, they are many multiples higher than the Intel/Solidgm TBW. Forget the number of years as it has little bearing on what is really warranted on SSD drives. It appears that Solidgm does not plan any future updates to this part of their product line and intends to keep pumping out the rebranded Intel drives. Yes the prices are attractive and performance isn't bad, but if the warranty is any indication don't expect durability.
Solidigm is a spin off from skhynix, not intel. however, it incorporates a lot of the engineers and intellectual property that skhynix bought from intel.

this specific drive uses an skhynix controller, dram and nand. this drive is IDENTICAL to the skhynix P41 platinum. the same exact product but with a different sticker on it.

Quote from smackdownfletch :
Is there a 4TB version of this?
no, not this model. it's a limitation of the controller this drive uses. if you want a drive this fast in 4tb capacity or larger, you'll have to buy an enterprise drive
Last edited by b00gersugar March 21, 2023 at 02:04 AM.
1
Pro
Expert
This user is an Expert in Computers
Mar 21, 2023
11,647 Posts
Joined Oct 2009
Mar 21, 2023
TekkenLord
Mar 21, 2023
Pro
Expert
This user is an Expert in Computers
11,647 Posts
What's up with the "Vine Customer Review of Free Product" reviewers flooding the review section?

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Mar 21, 2023
809 Posts
Joined Nov 2018
Mar 21, 2023
ElatedWalrus2609
Mar 21, 2023
809 Posts
Quote from UpbeatThread954 :
Full details here: file:///home/ajaymn/Downloads/P44-Pro-Product-Brief.pdf
5 yr warranty, 750 TBW for 1TB, 1200TBW for 2 TB.

Review: https://www.tomshardware.com/revi...d-review/3 [tomshardware.com]

Got one. Thanks!
I am wondering if Tom's pulled this one out of their rear-ends. From Solidgm's site:
" For PCIe drive usage, the value of the SMART attribute is referred to as "Percentage Used", as measured by Solidigm implementation of this "SMART" attribute and reported by the Solidigm Storage Tool (or such other tool as approved by Solidigm), reaches or exceeds a value of "100". No where on the site is TBW stated, so Tom's must be clairvoyant
https://sdmsdfwdriver.blob.core.w...nglish.pdf

However since you are quoting Tom's, here's their assessment on the Intel/SK Hynix deal.
https://www.tomshardware.com/news...ry-planned
I stand by my earlier statement. Here it is black and white.
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