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Product Name: | Solidigm™ P41 Plus Series 2TB PCIe GEN 4 NVMe 4.0 x4 M.2 2280 3D NAND Internal Solid State Drive (2TB, M.2 80mm, PCIe 4.0 x4) SSDPFKNU020TZX1 |
Manufacturer: | Solidigm |
Model Number: | 14489226000 |
Product SKU: | B0B9855VGS |
UPC: | 840307300249 |
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You can download the free version [majorgeeks.com] of Macrium Reflect from reputable freeware/shareware sites, like majorgeeks.com [majorgeeks.com].
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General purpose use/OS -> 760p (Better mixed use and full drive performance)
Both on paper are more durable drives than the P3/P3 Plus. I'd generally pick the 760p because it is cheaper.
Edit: They are both about as power efficient. There the P3 is probably a better pick.
General purpose use/OS -> 760p (Better mixed use and full drive performance)
Both on paper are more durable drives than the P3/P3 Plus. I'd generally pick the 760p because it is cheaper.
800TBW
5 year warranty
2000GB capacity
DWPD = TBW * 1000 / (warrantied-days * capacity-in-GB)
So for 2TB:
DWPD = 800 * 1000 / (1825 * 2000)
DWPD = 0.219 (which is pretty low)
https://www.kingston.co
Cliffnotes, what percentage of the total capacity can be overwritten every day before the drive can be expected to die. In this case, 21.9% or 438GB of data can be rewritten each day to expect a full 5 years from this drive before it fails.
For everyday general usage, that is good. For using this in a NAS as a cache drive, maybe its not so good.
Edit: For comparison this drive (while PCI Gen 3) would be better for cache drive.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B095PMX6JS/
So for 2TB:
DWPD = 2000 * 1000 / (1825 * 2000)
DWPD = 0.55
SO 55% of the 2TB or 1,100GB of data coule be rewritten each day to expect a full 5 years before the drive fails.
In theory, for the Solidigm drive, if you are writing 500GB of data to the drive each day, you can expect it to fail in 5 years time. For the TeamGroup still writing 500GB of data to the drive each day, you can expect it to last over 10 years.
This is way under the recommended spec, would not use this in a PS5.
"The sequential read speed of the drive needs to be at least 5,500MB/s"
This drive: read speed up to 4125 MB/s, write speed up to 3325 MB/s.
*Also needs a heatsink
https://www.pcmag.com/news/sony-d...-expansion
"The sequential read speed of the drive needs to be at least 5,500MB/s"
This drive: read speed up to 4125 MB/s, write speed up to 3325 MB/s.
*Also needs a heatsink
https://www.pcmag.com/news/sony-d...-expansion
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https://www.amazon.com/SolidigmTM...hd
https://www.solidigm.co
They're more likely to die from some other random issue than the cells being written too many times.
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Just realized I don't think this comes with heat sink. Should I add one?