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ThanksTerrible. Send it to me for free disposal, and buy a Quantum Big Foot.
OK, real answer. That's actually way too fast for that drive. You must have some kind of caching enabled.
Yeah, you have to turn that off in order for the benchmark results to mean anything. It's rated for 2.4GB/sec seq read /1.9GB seq write, so it should be close to that if it's brand new (or recently secure-erased).Thanks
I have momentum cache enabled. I didn't run a before and after tests but I'm just not too sure what to expect. happy to know it's good.
Yeah, you have to turn that off in order for the benchmark results to mean anything. It's rated for 2.4GB/sec seq read /1.9GB seq write, so it should be close to that if it's brand new (or recently secure-erased).
Is there an nvme that supports pcie 4 and does it increase speeds or benefit in any way?The P2 only supports PCIe 3.0 so you will never see it link at Gen 4
Yes. Quite a few. The current fastest SSDs for consumers are the WD Black SN850, the Samsung 980 PRO, and the Sabrent Rocket 4 Plus. They're all PCIe 4.0 and very fast.Is there an nvme that supports pcie 4
Not for most people no. If you don't specifically *need* faster storage - as in you are doing something that is *specifically* I/O intensive especially sequentially intensive - then there is practically no difference in perceived speed from one SSD to another. If you're just gaming, there is currently almost zero difference from even a SATA SSD to a NVMe one, let alone any difference between different NVMe ones.does it increase speeds or benefit in any way?
Thanks for the info.Yes. Quite a few. The current fastest SSDs for consumers are the WD Black SN850, the Samsung 980 PRO, and the Sabrent Rocket 4 Plus. They're all PCIe 4.0 and very fast.
Not for most people no. If you don't specifically *need* faster storage - as in you are doing something that is *specifically* I/O intensive especially sequentially intensive - then there is practically no difference in perceived speed from one SSD to another. If you're just gaming, there is currently almost zero difference from even a SATA SSD to a NVMe one, let alone any difference between different NVMe ones.
+1In most cases it's not worth worrying about, most SSDs are fast enough for most needs!
Those are speeds that many with a different platform can't achieve, and sadly they blame the NVMe.