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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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Thanks for the heads up. Now I know what to look out for 😁
You understand a lot of people just use their computers to browse Facebook, Youtube and Slickdeals, right?
800TBW is more than plenty for >99.9% of users. The drive and/or the system its in will be obsolete before they hit 800TBW.
If TBW is actually a realistic concern for a specific user, then I promise you that user isn't on SD just looking for the cheapest drive they can find.
And for record SK or Solidigm doesn't buy NAND from Micron. Both have their own fabs and Solidigm is few among who had capability to make QLC NAND and they have been selling in enterprise since 2017.
In fact, Kingston did the exact same thing with their NV2 drives.
In fact, Kingston did the exact same thing with their NV2 drives.
Let me correct myself. I can speak for this specific company
After the Solidigm rebranding, the P41 Plus is QLC, while the P44 is TLC.
The Solidigm P44 appears to be the same as the old SK Hynix P41.
Which to buy depends on your use case. If performance is important, stick with TLC (but at 2x the price).
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Pirme day is in a month around OCT 15th.
And the Early Black Firday months (OCT/NOV) of sales , ... it's not just on Black Friday anymore.
as a storage drive, dram-less would be best in the price/performance ratio
https://www.tomshardware.com/news...ler-change [tomshardware.com]
800TBW is more than plenty for >99.9% of users. The drive and/or the system its in will be obsolete before they hit 800TBW.
If TBW is actually a realistic concern for a specific user, then I promise you that user isn't on SD just looking for the cheapest drive they can find.
Don't get me wrong, I'm happy to spend for the peace of mind on proven drives. Just FYI, Samsung warranties something like the 980 Pro 1TB for 5 years, 600 TBW (2TB to 1200 TBW),1.5 M hours MTBF, very similar to Solidigm. I would easily go with Samsung for a backup drive, but depending on type of use and importance, I would consider Solidigm for other things. But I'm not an expert, and knew nothing of them before Slickdeals alerts sent me a few of these.
as a storage drive, dram-less would be best in the price/performance ratio
it only goes up to 1,500 but when i got the enclosure you could say the choices at the time were few and far between and fairly sketchy from reviews. it still works well enough for my needs though and is used as a backup boot drive/extremely fast storage
i'm not sure if there is any enclosure on the market that can do 40,000 (probably marketed) but the main culprit comes down to the individual controllers that can be used. That is the main limitation.. if there is an enclosure that could handle it I would be surprised as from what i can tell there hasn't been many gpu enclosures with that type of ability as of yet so an nvme ssd one sounds dubious to me as there aren't any drives on the market that can reach that bandwidth threshold yet.
And for record SK or Solidigm doesn't buy NAND from Micron. Both have their own fabs and Solidigm is few among who had capability to make QLC NAND and they have been selling in enterprise since 2017.
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https://www.anandtech.c
https://www.tomshardwar