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popularmendelsphotography posted Today 09:41 AM
popularmendelsphotography posted Today 09:41 AM

Samsung 4TB 870 EVO SATA III 2.5" Internal SSD $239.99 @B&H

$240

$345

30% off
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Model: Samsung 870 Evo Sata 2.5In Ssd 4Tb | MZ-77E4T0B/AM

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Sort: Lowest to Highest | Last Updated 8/11/2025, 02:44 PM
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Today 11:04 AM
587 Posts
Joined Nov 2012
mvpcrossxoverToday 11:04 AM
587 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank mvpcrossxover

$170 back in 2023 according to SD history. We're going the opposite direction
1
Today 03:25 PM
2,002 Posts
Joined Feb 2009
yapchagiToday 03:25 PM
2,002 Posts
this discount sucks compared to a few years back. But it's still the best option now. I wish I bought it last time at $170 for 4 TB. I need SATA SSD for games. Already using the NVME for another SSD for OS.
Today 04:34 PM
220 Posts
Joined Nov 2016
basecaseToday 04:34 PM
220 Posts
Shows $259.99 for me. Do you have to log in to get the lower price?
Never mind. ...just add to cart for for lower price.
Today 05:44 PM
679 Posts
Joined Aug 2012
riffdexToday 05:44 PM
679 Posts
Quote from mvpcrossxover :
$170 back in 2023 according to SD history. We're going the opposite direction
SATA based SSDs are becoming increasingly niche, and generally utilize the same fast NAND utilized in NVMEs, just bottlenecked by the SATA protocol. The physical size of a SATA SSD also has some added material costs. They will still be a necessary market to maintain for compatibility reasons, but companies are increasingly shifting production away from these.
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Today 09:47 PM
6,923 Posts
Joined Aug 2005
amax
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Today 09:47 PM
6,923 Posts
Quote from riffdex :
SATA based SSDs are becoming increasingly niche, and generally utilize the same fast NAND utilized in NVMEs, just bottlenecked by the SATA protocol. The physical size of a SATA SSD also has some added material costs. They will still be a necessary market to maintain for compatibility reasons, but companies are increasingly shifting production away from these.
While this is technically true, it is also a simplistic summary. NVMe skimps almost universally on DRAM cache, whereas legacy SATA drives date to an era when manufacturers gave a shit about us and retained the feature. When copying large files (terabytes), they don't slow to a crawl on these legacy drives and ironically can move faster overall than NVMe that skimps on cache.

My favorite feature of 2.5" SATA drives is that they are like removable data cartridges using IcyDock front bay ports.
1
Today 09:58 PM
1,600 Posts
Joined Jul 2019
BlueVoyager308Today 09:58 PM
1,600 Posts
Quote from yapchagi :
this discount sucks compared to a few years back. But it's still the best option now. I wish I bought it last time at $170 for 4 TB. I need SATA SSD for games. Already using the NVME for another SSD for OS.
Buy the M.2 SSD and use PCI-E adapter card. Or, with the same $230 you can buy a WD-Black SSD. Put your OS and games on the same SSD. In older times, you don't want to put the OS and other stuff on the same hard drive, because they would compete for the I/O bandwidth. Now with SSD, no longer it's an issue.

No way I'd pay $230 for a SATA 4 TB. Not even at $100 because of the limited number of SATA ports on the motherboard. I need SATA ports for the 20TB drives.
Last edited by BlueVoyager308 August 11, 2025 at 03:06 PM.

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