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Edited April 17, 2024
at 08:16 PM
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https://us-store.msi.com/SPATIUM-...ME-M.2-2TB OOS- PCIe Gen4x4 interface and complies with the NVMe 1.4 standard
- Sequential Read speeds up to 7400MB/s and Write speeds up to 7000MB/s
- Up to 3000 TBW
- Has DRAM
Also available ...
2TB MSI SPATIUM M482 PCIe 4.0 NVMe M.2 $110
https://us-store.msi.com/SPATIUM-...Me-M.2-2TB- PCIe Gen4x4 interface and complies with the NVMe 1.4 standard
- Sequential Read speeds up to 7300MB/s and Write speeds up to 6400MB/s
- Up to 1200 TBW
- DRAMless
The SSDs seem to go in and out of stock. Keep refreshing the pages.
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Looking around the internet (Amazon, toms hardware, etc.) it looks like everywhere else lists it as 1400 TBW.
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank GardenGnomeFish
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank Blue1995
Looking around the internet (Amazon, toms hardware, etc.) it looks like everywhere else lists it as 1400 TBW.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank Spartan87
Looking around the internet (Amazon, toms hardware, etc.) it looks like everywhere else lists it as 1400 TBW.
1TB 2TB 4TB
WD 600 1200 n/a
Spatium. 1600 1400 3000
Spatium vs WD SN770 MTBF is 1.5 Million hours and 1.75 Million hours respectively). DRAM is nice, but reliability is king for my use.
Context: I have a Dell with PCIe Gen 3 so Gen 4 is wasted on my desktop and am looking for bang for the buck, under $130 for 2TB. Odds are it isn't 3000 like the 4TB but somewhere in between, I'm guessing 2400). At anything over 2000TBW, I will pull the trigger and get one for the Dell and another for use as an external for my MBP Thunderbolt.
Hopefully you have it unplugged from your system and sitting in an enclosure if you need anything off of it.
With the right software, you still have a shot at retrieving some data, though likely not all.
This is partly why most backup drives should still be mechanical.
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With the right software, you still have a shot at retrieving some data, though likely not all.
This is partly why most backup drives should still be mechanical.
No. All your drives with important data should have redundancy. Think ZFS.
Everything else is roughly $15-20 more...
This is from a comment on a Reddit post of the same deal a week ago.
The MSI Spatium M480 Pro 2 TB is a TLC SSD.
Looking around the internet (Amazon, toms hardware, etc.) it looks like everywhere else lists it as 1400 TBW.