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Product Name: | Lexar NS100 2TB 2.5” SATA III Internal SSD, Up to 550MB/s Read (LNS100-2TRBNA) |
Manufacturer: | Lexar International |
Model Number: | LNS100-2TRBNA |
Product SKU: | B0BJ7MTT8M |
UPC: | 843367120765 |
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I've had good luck with Lexar products in the past, although I haven't used this specific drive. I've used other cheap 2.5 SSDs and *knock on wood* they all work as advertised.
While there are nice advantages with the M.2 PCI-E gen 4 SSDs on the market now that you'd use in a new machine, nothing beats the tremendous jump from an old 5400rpm laptop hdd to an SSD. Going from older 2.5 SATA SSDs to the newer M.2 drives is nice don't get me wrong, but it still doesn't compare with the initial HDD --> SSD switch. My opinion, of course.
Near full it still writes at triple digit speeds unzipping hundreds of GB files, I've had qlc 670p's drop down to double digit under the same conditions, so the dram didn't save the 670p.
Full durability test in chinese because far too many budget drive reviews are write 1GB to an empty drive type superficial conclusions.
https://www.pceva.com.c
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I've had good luck with Lexar products in the past, although I haven't used this specific drive. I've used other cheap 2.5 SSDs and *knock on wood* they all work as advertised.
While there are nice advantages with the M.2 PCI-E gen 4 SSDs on the market now that you'd use in a new machine, nothing beats the tremendous jump from an old 5400rpm laptop hdd to an SSD. Going from older 2.5 SATA SSDs to the newer M.2 drives is nice don't get me wrong, but it still doesn't compare with the initial HDD --> SSD switch. My opinion, of course.
Going from HDD to SSD/nvme is night day difference. It's similar to going from 60hz to 120+. Just can't go back
If you're using this for smaller file writes, I'm sure it's great. And once it's written to, the read speeds are great (for SATA III), but I plan to add to it over it time and I just hate the slow write speeds I've experienced for the minimal savings.
Here's my crystal disk mark results [imgur.com]
If you're using this for smaller file writes, I'm sure it's great. And once it's written to, the read speeds are great (for SATA III), but I plan to add to it over it time and I just hate the slow write speeds I've experienced for the minimal savings.
Here's my crystal disk mark results [imgur.com]
I use freefilesync to mirror certain work directories on a schedule.
but you can use stablebit $29 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yFVbuzP
It will be fine. Games are all reads.
If you're using this for smaller file writes, I'm sure it's great. And once it's written to, the read speeds are great (for SATA III), but I plan to add to it over it time and I just hate the slow write speeds I've experienced for the minimal savings.
Here's my crystal disk mark results [imgur.com]
So to confirm I ran the 32GB sequential test, write speeds are higher 464MB/s, is it being written to on the PI?
https://ibb.co/gynFSWK
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So to confirm I ran the 32GB sequential test, write speeds are higher 464MB/s, is it being written to on the PI?
https://ibb.co/gynFSWK
Also something is odd with your format? Your drive space doesn't match, is it partitioned?
https://ssd.userbenchma
"The Lexar NS100 2TB averaged just 6.2% lower than the peak scores attained by the group leaders. This is an excellent result which ranks the Lexar NS100 2TB near the top of the comparison list."
Also something is odd with your format? Your drive space doesn't match, is it partitioned?
I guess worst case scenario is you got a fake drive some how. The size should match.
1.78GiB is 1.92GB
1.9GiB is 2048GB
Firmware should be SN11035 in crystaldiskinfo, size 2048.4 GB
If you're using this for smaller file writes, I'm sure it's great. And once it's written to, the read speeds are great (for SATA III), but I plan to add to it over it time and I just hate the slow write speeds I've experienced for the minimal savings.
Here's my crystal disk mark results [imgur.com]
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