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Product Name: | Crucial P3 Plus 4TB 3D NAND PCIe Gen4 NVMe M.2 Internal SSD, 4800MB/s Read |
Product Description: | Fast. Affordable. Reliable Fuel your system with Gen4 performance Crucial P3 Plus Gen4 NVMe SSD Valuable Gen4 performance is here. Introducing the Crucial P3 Plus Gen4 NVMe SSD, delivering impressive speed with sequential reads/writes up to 4800/4100MB/s while providing data protection for optimal security. Engineered by Micron with the latest Gen4 NVMe technology, the Crucial P3 Plus comes in generous capacities and offers flexible backward compatibility for most Gen3 systems. Powerful Performance Upgrade your PC with the fast Gen4 performance it needs at a price you want. The Crucial P3 Plus NVMe SSD delivers load times and data transfers that are 8.9x faster than SATA and 43% faster than the fastest Gen3 SSDs. Spacious Storage With generous space of up to 4TB, the Crucial P3 Plus offers powerful Gen4 storage for loads of apps, programs, files, docs, photos, videos, and games - with room to spare. Trusted Technology Crucial P3 Plus Gen4 NVMe SSDs are built with high-quality Micron Advanced 3D NAND, tested and validated to the exacting standards you've come to expect from one of the world's largest manufacturers of flash memory. Want proof? Go check out our award-winning line of SSDs. Solid Security Gen4 technology, SSD management software for performance optimization, and firmware updates give the Crucial P3 Plus Gen4 NVMe SSD everything you need for security and peace of mind. Ongoing support We've got your back! Crucial offers everything you need to get started and maintain optimal SSD performance. • Step-by-step installation instructions • Free Acronis True Image for Crucial cloning software • Free Storage Executive software for firmware management One of the largest memory and storage manufacturers worldwide Micron has been producing some of the world's most advanced memory and storage technologies for more than 40 years. All Crucial products are developed by Micron's world-class engineering team to ensure best-in-class quality and reliability. |
Product SKU: | ct4p3pssd8 |
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Additionally, the p3 plus has a fairly low tier controller, the Phison E21T (a low end controller for dramless drives from 2021), and lacks dram. Its random 4k performance, particularly at the more relevant low queue depths, is rather poor overall. The sequential read and write speeds are also low for a modern gen 4 drive, but those peak sequential speeds are basically meaningless above a few thousand for the vast majority of use cases.
Overall, at $150 this drive is good for the price if you just want basic mass storage, and will probably be decent as a low tier game drive. I would absolutely not recommend it for use as an OS/boot drive.
If you're on a tight budget you can get away with a drive without dram if it's got a recent controller with strong random 4k performance and hmb (host memory buffer), but dram is generally preferred. I would not recommend getting a qlc drive as a boot drive unless your budget is cataclysmically low, the increased endurance of tlc drives is rather important for use as an os drive. Peak sequential read and write speeds, despite being heavily marketed by basically every company out there, aren't terribly relevant for standard use cases. So long as the drive has a peak sequential read speed of at least 5000MB/s it should be fine. Random 4k read and write performance, denoted in iops, is far more relevant for actual performance.
There are certain things you should avoid in a drive where reliability is key, such as a boot drive. First off, many cheap drives with high end performance make use of the innogrit ig5236 (rainier) controller. The ig5236 is notorious for having a variety of issues, and drives with this controller should not be used as a boot drive unless you really feel like taking a gamble, keep full backups, and the drive is substantially cheaper than comparable options.
Next, ymtc 128L tlc nand is known to have reliability issues. That particular nand is used in many cheaper "high end" chinese drives, and should be avoided. To the best of my knowledge ymtc 232L nand does not have known issues currently. If you decide to get a drive with ymtc nand make absolutely sure it's 232L, and under no circumstances get a drive with ymtc nand and the ig5236 controller. Drives with both the ig5236 controller and ymtc nand brick themselves.
The current sweet spot in terms of price for capacity is 2tb. Prices have increased dramatically over the past several months, it used to be a high end gen4 2tb drive was $100 or less, but now you're lucky to find one for $120. In terms of specific product recommendations, I'm a bit out of date, but all the drives I list should offer very good performance and good value on sale. The list will be in order of most to least desirable, but any of them are perfectly suitable for use as a boot drive, and differences in real world performance will be minimal. This is by no means an exhaustive list, so please do your own research. Recommended drives off the top of my head (most to least desirable): samsung 990 pro, solidigm p44 pro, sk hynix p41 platinum, western digital black sn850x (avoid if you use windows bitlocker), crucial t500, samsung 980 pro, western digital black sn850 (avoid if you use windows bitlocker).
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Any PCIE4 ssd will work fine, which this is. Just make sure to get a heat sink that fits in the ps5.
There used to be claims that maybe one day games will require faster read speeds but I have yet to come across a game exceeds the limit of this drive.
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These are very good when paired with a cheap USB4 enclosure for 2-3GB/s transfer speeds -
https://a.aliexpress.co
Meantime, Adorama imposes shipping charges no matter what.
What's the problem with imposing shipping charges? They're not claiming free shipping are they?