Consumer data storage requirements have skyrocketed in recent years. The advent of smartphones and social media has given rise to a large class of content creators. The increasing amount of digital data that needs to be archived and / or used in day-to-day work has brought to fore the evolving nature of backup media for consumers. From the days of using external hard drives connected to computers, consumers now require the ability to back up data from multiple devices (including smartphones and tablets) in a seamless manner.
Rapid technological advancements in NAND flash technology (including the advent of 3D NAND) and speed of host interface protocols (such as the move from USB 2.0 to 3.0, and onwards to 3.2 Gen 2 / Gen 2×2 / USB4) has resulted in the increasing popularity of portable solid-state drives (PSSDs). These have almost completely eclipsed bus-powered 2.5& HDDs in the market.
In the last couple of quarters, we have seen a couple of innovative product introductions such as the Samsung T5 EVO using QLC NAND for high-capacity PSSDs and a host of USB4 PSSDs such as the ADATA SE920. Compact high-speed PSSDs with a low power consumption profile continue to be the major market driver, as evidenced by a slew of PSSDs launched at CES based on native UFD controllers (the Lexar SL500 based on the Silicon Motion SM2320 is an example). Multiple vendors have also introduced USB 3.2 Gen 2 / Gen 2×2 ‘SSD-in-a-stick’ models based on native flash controllers. On the other hand, established vendors are pushing the boundary with ultra-high capacity options and true 40 Gbps USB4 PSSDs.
2024 Q1 PSSD Recommendations – Interface / Peak Speed Basis (as of March 8, 2024) |
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Interface / Speed Category | Drive Family | Capacity | ¢/GB | Purchase Link |
Thunderbolt (2.5 GBps) | SanDisk Professional PRO-G40 | 4000 | 10.5 | $420 (Amazon) ( 10.5¢ / GB ) |
USB 3.2 Gen 2×2 (2 GBps) | Crucial X10 Pro | 4000 | 7.12 | $285 (Amazon) $285 (Newegg) ( 7.12¢ / GB ) |
USB 3.2 Gen 2 (1 GBps) | Crucial X9 | 4000 | 5.75 | $230 (Amazon) $230 (Newegg) ( 5.75¢ / GB ) |
USB 3.2 Gen 1 / Entry-Level USB 3.2 Gen 2 ( 400 MBps – 800 MBps ) | Crucial X6 | 2000 | 5.4 | $150 (Amazon) $108 (Newegg) ( 5.4¢ / GB ) |
Since the publication of our last PSSD guide, we have reviewed three different PSSDs based on widely different platforms – the LaCie Rugged Mini SSD based on the Silicon Motion SM2320 native UFD controller, the Silicon Power PX10 based on a Phison E15T SSD with a JMicron JMS583 bridge, and the SandDisk Professional PRO-BLADE TRANSPORT units (based on a WD_BLACK SN750E SSD with an Asmedia ASM2364 bridge). These have been added to the list of considered PSSDs in this guide.
Consumer requirements in the portable SSD market vary greatly. At the entry level, we have folks taking a step up from commodity thumb drives for backing up their data or transferring files from one system to another. Short burts of high speed, low power consumption for extending host battery life, and multiple capacity options are important here. Performance consistency under sustained stress is not a factor. In the mid-range, we have casual gamers and amateur content creators. While they require a certain level of performance consistency guarantee under sustained traffic, SLC cache sizes in the 40 – 100 GB range are often enough for that purpose. At the top end, we have professionals in the content creation industry, IT workers, and tech-savvy consumers. This demanding segment expects high-end internal SSD performance in their PSSDs for backing up data in the field, running portable operating systems across multiple computers, and transferring large amounts of data between different systems frequently. PSSDs with DRAM for the flash translation layer and / or those with high-end transfer rate specifications (USB 3.2 Gen 2×2 / Thunderbolt drives) are suitable for such use-cases.
The tuning of this PSSD guide is based on multiple factors. The obvious one is the speed rating / host interface connection protocol. At the lowest end, we have USB 2.0 thumb drives – but those are not the focus of this guide. For our purposes, the entry level is the 500 MBps-class. On the left of this, we have USB 3.2 Gen 1 ( 5 Gbps ) drives like the Samsung T5 EVO family. On the right, we have families like the Crucial X6. It is a USB 3.2 Gen 2 ( 10 Gbps ) drive, but the 500 GB model employs a SATA SSD behind the Gen 2 bridge, capping it at 540 MBps. The other capacities use the Phison U17 native flash controller. While it also has a USB 3.2 Gen 2 upstream interface, the controller characteristics and use of QLC NAND restrict them to sub-800 MBps speeds even under the best of conditions. At the highest end, we have the 2.5 GBps-class Thunderbolt 3 drives. Between these two extremes, vendors have provided consumers with multiple options for 1 GBps-class, and 2 GBps-class PSSDs.
Another factor influencing consumer choice is the physical size of the PSSD. Some scenarios dictate the use of a thumb drive, and thanks to technological advancements, we now have affordable high-performance SSDs in that form-factor.
2024 Q1 PSSD Recommendations – PSSD Category Basis (as of March 8, 2024) |
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PSSD Category | Drive Family | Capacity | $/GB | Purchase Link |
SSD in a Stick (UFD) | Kingston DataTraveler Max | 1000 | 0.09 | $90 (Amazon) $94 (Newegg) ( 9¢ / GB ) |
Cabled External Drive | Crucial X6 | 2000 | 0.05 | $150 (Amazon) $108 (Newegg) ( 5.4¢ / GB ) |
There is always a trade-off between performance and power consumption in any computing category, and PSSDs are no exception. Bridge-based solutions provide more flexibility and, depending on the SSD behind it, can provide better performance compared to native flash controllers (which are almost always DRAM-less). However, the latter has the advantage of lower BOM cost (translates to lower consumer pricing). Replacing a two-chip solution (SSD controller + bridge) with a single native flash controller brings power consumption benefits as well. This may also influce consumer choice while selecting a PSSD for purchase.
2024 Q1 PSSD Recommendations – Controller Basis (as of March 8, 2024) |
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Controller Category | Drive Family | Capacity | $/GB | Purchase Link |
Native | Crucial X6 | 2000 | 0.05 | $150 (Amazon) $108 (Newegg) ( 5.4¢ / GB ) |
Bridge | Samsung T5 EVO | 4000 | 0.06 | $250 (Amazon) $240 (Newegg) ( 6¢ / GB ) |
The type of NAND in the PSSD is yet another factor, with consumer QLC to be avoided for write-intensive and sustained performance-sensitive use-cases. However, the same QLC can be a cost-effective choice for entry-level PSSD workloads where consumers are migrating from either thumb drives or external hard drives.
2024 Q1 PSSD Recommendations – NAND Type Basis (as of March 8, 2024) |
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Controller Category | Drive Family | Capacity | $/GB | Purchase Link |
3D TLC | Crucial X9 Pro | 4000 | 0.06 | $246 (Amazon) $250 (Newegg) ( 6.15¢ / GB ) |
3D QLC | Crucial X6 | 2000 | 0.05 | $150 (Amazon) $108 (Newegg) ( 5.4¢ / GB ) |
For our guide, we are narrowing down the vast field of PSSDs into a few select product lineups. These are the ones which we have analyzed in great detail – either through hands-on review, or as part of their launch coverage. If there are any PSSD models from the top tier vendors that you would like us to consider for future guides, a mention in the comments will place them in our review consideration queue.
Aspects of Interest
Almost all of the PSSDs considered in this buyer’s guide have been subject to hands-on review. The relevant links along with other aspects of interest are provided in the table below.
Portable SSDs – Aspects of Interest | ||||
PSSD Model | Category | Upstream Port | Hardware Configuration | Additional Coverage |
SanDisk Professional PRO-G40 | Cabled External Drive | Thunderbolt 3 Type-C (Female) | Toshiba / WD BiCS 4 96L 3D TLC + WD In-House Controller + DDR4 RAM (SN750E SSD)+ Intel JHL7440 & ASMedia ASM2362 Bridges |
SanDisk Professional PRO-G40 SSD 2TB Review |
Crucial X10 Pro | Cabled External Drive | USB 3.2 Gen 2×2 Type-C (Female) | Micron 176L 3D TLC + Silicon Motion SM2320 Native UFD Controller |
Crucial X10 Pro 2TB Review |
Kingston XS2000 | Cabled External Drive | USB 3.2 Gen 2×2 Type-C (Female) | Micron 96L 3D TLC + Silicon Motion SM2320 Native UFD Controller |
Kingston XS2000 2TB Review |
PNY EliteX-PRO | Cabled External Drive | USB 3.2 Gen 2×2 Type-C (Female) | SK hynix 128L 3D TLC + Phison U18 Native UFD Controller |
PNY EliteX-PRO Portable SSD 4TB Review |
Samsung T9 | Cabled External Drive | USB 3.2 Gen 2×2 Type-C (Female) | Samsung 136L V-NAND TLC + Samsung S4LR033 Pablo NVMe Controller + ASMedia ASM2364 Bridge |
Samsung T9 Portable SSD 4TB Review |
SanDisk Extreme PRO v2 (SDSSDE81) | Cabled External Drive | USB 3.2 Gen 2×2 Type-C (Female) | Toshiba / WD BiCS 4 96L 3D TLC + WD In-House Controller + DDR4 RAM (SN730E SSD)+ ASMedia ASM2364 Bridge |
SanDisk Extreme PRO Portable SSD v2 4TB Review |
Seagate FireCuda Gaming SSD | Cabled External Drive | USB 3.2 Gen 2×2 Type-C (Female) | Toshiba / WD BiCS 3 64L 3D TLC + Phison E12 NVMe Controller + DDR4 RAM (FireCuda 510 SSD)+ ASMedia ASM2364 Bridge |
Seagate FireCuda Gaming SSD 1TB Review |
WD_BLACK P50 Game Drive | Cabled External Drive | USB 3.2 Gen 2×2 Type-C (Female) | Toshiba / WD BiCS 4 96L 3D TLC + WD In-House Controller + DDR4 RAM (SN750E SSD)+ ASMedia ASM2364 Bridge |
WD_BLACK P50 Game Drive SSD 1TB Review |
WD_BLACK P40 Game Drive | Cabled External Drive | USB 3.2 Gen 2×2 Type-C (Female) | Toshiba / WD BiCS 5 112L 3D TLC + WD DRAM-less In-House Controller (SN560E SSD)+ ASMedia ASM2364 Bridge |
WD_BLACK P40 Game Drive SSD 1TB Review |
Crucial X6 | Cabled External Drive | USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C (Female) | (1TB, 2TB & 4TB Models) Micron 96L 3D QLC + Phison U17 Native UFD Controller (500GB Model) Micron 96L 3D QLC + Silicon Motion SM2259XT SATA Controller + ASMedia ASM235CM Bridge |
Crucial X6 Portable SSD 4TB Review |
Crucial X9 | Cabled External Drive | USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C (Female) | Micron 176L 3D QLC + Phison U17 Native UFD Controller |
Crucial X9 Portable SSD Launch Coverage |
Crucial X9 Pro | Cabled External Drive | USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C (Female) | Micron 176L 3D TLC + Silicon Motion SM2320 Native UFD Controller |
Crucial X9 Pro 2TB Review |
Kingston DataTraveler Max | SSD in a Stick (UFD) | USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C (Male) | Micron 96L 3D TLC + Silicon Motion SM2320 Native UFD Controller |
Kingston DT Max 1TB Review |
Kingston DataTraveler Max A | SSD in a Stick (UFD) | USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-A (Male) | Toshiba BiCS5 112L 3D TLC + Silicon Motion SM2320 Native UFD Controller |
Kingston DTMAXA/256GB Review |
OWC Envoy Pro Mini | SSD in a Stick (UFD) | USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C (Male) + Integrated Type-C (Female) to Type-A (Male) Converter |
??? 3D TLC + Phison U17 Native UFD Controller |
OWC Envoy Pro Mini 1TB Review |
PNY Pro Elite V2 | Cabled External Drive | USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C (Female) | SK hynix 128L 3D TLC + Phison U17 Native UFD Controller |
PNY Pro Elite V2 Portable SSD 1TB Review |
Samsung T7 Shield | Cabled External Drive | USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C (Female) | Samsung 136L V-NAND TLC + Samsung S4LR033 Pablo NVMe Controller + ASMedia ASM2362 Bridge |
Samsung Portable SSD T7 Touch 1TB Review |
Samsung T7 Touch | Cabled External Drive | USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C (Female) | Samsung 92L V-NAND TLC + Samsung S4LR033 Pablo NVMe Controller + ASMedia ASM2362 Bridge |
Samsung Portable SSD T7 Touch 1TB Review |
SK hynix Beetle X31 | Cabled External Drive | USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C (Female) | SK hynix 128L 3D NAND TLC + SK hynix In-House NVMe Controller + LPDDR4 RAM (SK hynix BC711 M.2 2242 OEM NVMe SSD) + ASMedia ASM2362 Bridge |
SK hynix Beetle X31 Launch Coverage |
Transcend ESD310C | SSD in a Stick (UFD) | USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-A (Male) + Type-C (Male) | Toshiba BiCS5 112L 3D TLC + Silicon Motion SM2320 Native UFD Controller |
Transcend ESD310C 1TB Review |
Samsung T5 EVO | Cabled External Drive | USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-C (Female) | Samsung 176L V-NAND QLC + Samsung S4LR069 Metis SATA Controller + LPDDR4 RAM + ASMedia ASM235CM Bridge |
Samsung T5 EVO 8TB Review |
LaCie Rugged Mini SSD | Cabled External Drive | USB 3.2 Gen 2×2 Type-C (Female) | Micron 176L 3D TLC + Silicon Motion SM2320 Native UFD Controller |
LaCie Rugged Mini 2TB Review |
Silicon Power PX10 | Cabled External Drive | USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C (Female) | SK hynix V7 176L 3D TLC + Phison E15T NVMe Controller + JMicron JMS583 Bridge |
Silicon Power PX10 1TB Review |
SanDisk Professional PRO-BLADE TRANSPORT | Cabled External Drive | USB 3.2 Gen 2×2 Type-C (Female) | Toshiba / WD BiCS 4 96L 3D TLC + WD In-House Controller + DDR4 RAM (SN750E SSD)+ ASMedia ASM2364 Bridge |
SanDisk Professional PRO-BLADE TRANSPORT 2TB and 4TB Review |
The above table also lists some of the key consideration aspects that are usually not part of the marketing specifications. For example, if frequent usage with a mobile device is a use-case, it is important to choose a low-power option. PSSDs employing native UFD controllers almost always win on this metric over bridge-based solutions. Some use-cases may preclude the possibility of utilizing a separate cable. For such scenarios, one of the ‘SSD-in-a-stick’ models may be the optimal choice. QLC-based options should be avoided for write-heavy use-cases. Users planning to run a portable OS on their portable drive may be better off using PSSDs with DRAM built in for the flash translation layer – that greatly helps with small-sized random disk accesses common in such use-cases.
Pricing Matrices and Concluding Remarks
Multiple pricing matrices are provided below based on the speed class of each PSSD family. Readers who have already decided upon the host interface type for their PSSD can narrow down their options based on the relevant table.
PSSD Pricing Matrix (as of March 8, 2024) (USB 3.2 Gen 1 / Entry-Level USB 3.2 Gen 2 ( 400 MBps – 800 MBps ) ) |
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PSSD Model | 250 GB | 500 GB | 1000 GB | 2000 GB | 4000 GB | 8000 GB |
Crucial X6 | – | $50 (Amazon) $53 (Newegg) ( 10¢ / GB ) |
$68 (Amazon) $68 (Newegg) ( 6.8¢ / GB ) |
$150 (Amazon) $108 (Newegg) ( 5.4¢ / GB ) |
$220 (Amazon) $220 (Newegg) ( 5.5¢ / GB ) |
– |
Samsung T5 EVO | – | – | – | $170 (Amazon) $170 (Newegg) ( 8.5¢ / GB ) |
$250 (Amazon) $240 (Newegg) ( 6¢ / GB ) |
$600 (Amazon) $600 (Newegg) ( 7.5¢ / GB ) |
PSSD Pricing Matrix (as of March 8, 2024) (USB 3.2 Gen 2 (1 GBps)) |
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PSSD Model | 250 GB | 500 GB | 1000 GB | 2000 GB | 4000 GB | 8000 GB |
SanDisk Professional PRO-G40 | – | – | $180 (Amazon) ( 18¢ / GB ) |
$249 (Amazon) $260 (Newegg) ( 12.45¢ / GB ) |
$420 (Amazon) ( 10.5¢ / GB ) |
– |
Crucial X9 | – | – | $75 (Amazon) $75 (Newegg) ( 7.5¢ / GB ) |
$125 (Amazon) $125 (Newegg) ( 6.25¢ / GB ) |
$230 (Amazon) $230 (Newegg) ( 5.75¢ / GB ) |
– |
Crucial X9 Pro | – | – | $95 (Amazon) $95 (Newegg) ( 9.5¢ / GB ) |
$150 (Amazon) $150 (Newegg) ( 7.5¢ / GB ) |
$246 (Amazon) $250 (Newegg) ( 6.15¢ / GB ) |
– |
Kingston DataTraveler Max | $29 (Amazon) $39 (Newegg) ( 11.6¢ / GB ) |
$51 (Amazon) $65 (Newegg) ( 10.2¢ / GB ) |
$90 (Amazon) $94 (Newegg) ( 9¢ / GB ) |
– | – | – |
Kingston DataTraveler Max A | $35 (Amazon) ( 14¢ / GB ) |
$55 (Amazon) ( 11¢ / GB ) |
$91 (Amazon) ( 9.1¢ / GB ) |
– | – | – |
OWC Envoy Pro Mini | $87 (Amazon) ( 34.8¢ / GB ) |
$100 (Amazon) ( 20¢ / GB ) |
$150 (Amazon) ( 15¢ / GB ) |
– | – | – |
PNY Pro Elite V2 | – | $65 (Amazon) $65 (Newegg) ( 13¢ / GB ) |
$92 (Amazon) $92 (Newegg) ( 9.2¢ / GB ) |
– | – | – |
Samsung T7 Shield | – | – | $110 (Amazon) $110 (Newegg) ( 11¢ / GB ) |
$167 (Amazon) $180 (Newegg) ( 8.35¢ / GB ) |
$293 (Amazon) $295 (Newegg) ( 7.32¢ / GB ) |
– |
Samsung T7 Touch | – | $145 (Newegg) ( 29¢ / GB ) |
$150 (Amazon) $160 (Newegg) ( 15¢ / GB ) |
$162 (Amazon) ( 8.1¢ / GB ) |
– | – |
SK hynix Beetle X31 | – | $70 (Amazon) $70 (Newegg) ( 14¢ / GB ) |
$90 (Amazon) $90 (Newegg) ( 9¢ / GB ) |
– | – | – |
Transcend ESD310C | $39 (Amazon) ( 15.6¢ / GB ) |
$59 (Amazon) ( 11.8¢ / GB ) |
$91 (Amazon) ( 9.1¢ / GB ) |
$172 (Amazon) ( 8.6¢ / GB ) |
– | – |
Silicon Power PX10 | – | – | $90 (Amazon) ( 9¢ / GB ) |
$140 (Amazon) ( 7¢ / GB ) |
$246 (Amazon) ( 6.15¢ / GB ) |
– |
PSSD Pricing Matrix (as of March 8, 2024) (USB 3.2 Gen 2×2 (2 GBps)) |
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PSSD Model | 250 GB | 500 GB | 1000 GB | 2000 GB | 4000 GB | 8000 GB |
Crucial X10 Pro | – | – | $105 (Amazon) $105 (Newegg) ( 10.5¢ / GB ) |
$180 (Amazon) $180 (Newegg) ( 9¢ / GB ) |
$285 (Amazon) $285 (Newegg) ( 7.12¢ / GB ) |
– |
Kingston XS2000 | – | $77 (Amazon) $100 (Newegg) ( 20¢ / GB ) |
$115 (Amazon) ( 11.5¢ / GB ) |
$193 (Amazon) $196 (Newegg) ( 9.65¢ / GB ) |
$350 (Amazon) ( 8.75¢ / GB ) |
– |
PNY EliteX-PRO | – | $60 (Amazon) $70 (Newegg) ( 12¢ / GB ) |
$100 (Amazon) $100 (Newegg) ( 10¢ / GB ) |
$155 (Amazon) $173 (Newegg) ( 7.75¢ / GB ) |
$331 (Amazon) ( 8.28¢ / GB ) |
– |
Samsung T9 | – | – | $120 (Amazon) $120 (Newegg) ( 12¢ / GB ) |
$201 (Amazon) $220 (Newegg) ( 10.05¢ / GB ) |
$330 (Amazon) $330 (Newegg) ( 8.25¢ / GB ) |
– |
SanDisk Extreme PRO v2 (SDSSDE81) | – | – | $110 (Amazon) $125 (Newegg) ( 11¢ / GB ) |
$195 (Amazon) $220 (Newegg) ( 9.75¢ / GB ) |
$323 (Amazon) $290 (Newegg) ( 7.25¢ / GB ) |
– |
Seagate FireCuda Gaming SSD | – | $190 (Amazon) ( 19¢ / GB ) |
$299 (Amazon) ( 14.95¢ / GB ) |
– | – | |
WD_BLACK P50 Game Drive | – | – | $169 (Amazon) ( 16.9¢ / GB ) |
$342 (Amazon) ( 17.1¢ / GB ) |
$430 (Amazon) ( 10.75¢ / GB ) |
– |
WD_BLACK P40 Game Drive | – | $100 (Newegg) ( 20¢ / GB ) |
$120 (Amazon) $120 (Newegg) ( 12¢ / GB ) |
$200 (Amazon) $200 (Newegg) ( 10¢ / GB ) |
– | – |
LaCie Rugged Mini SSD | – | $107 (Amazon) ( 21.4¢ / GB ) |
$120 (Amazon) $120 (Newegg) ( 12¢ / GB ) |
$190 (Amazon) $228 (Newegg) ( 9.5¢ / GB ) |
– | – |
SanDisk Professional PRO-BLADE TRANSPORT | – | – | $160 (Amazon) ( 16¢ / GB ) |
$220 (Amazon) ( 11¢ / GB ) |
$340 (Amazon) ( 8.5¢ / GB ) |
– |
PSSD Pricing Matrix (as of March 8, 2024) (Thunderbolt (2.5 GBps)) |
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PSSD Model | 250 GB | 500 GB | 1000 GB | 2000 GB | 4000 GB | 8000 GB |
SanDisk Professional PRO-G40 | – | – | $180 (Amazon) ( 18¢ / GB ) |
$249 (Amazon) $260 (Newegg) ( 12.45¢ / GB ) |
$420 (Amazon) ( 10.5¢ / GB ) |
– |
Crucial was one of the first vendors to release a mainstream PSSD with QLC in the late 2010s. Vendor confidence in QLC has been improving steadily in the last few years. Solidigm even has an enterprise line based on QLC flash. On the PSSD front, Samsung joined the QLC fray recently with the launch of the T5 EVO. It is currently the sole choice for a compact 8 TB PSSD from a tier-one vendor. There is a narrow set of use-cases where consumers would be willing to pay a huge premium for a unique product that sacrifices plenty on the performance table. The Samsung T5 EVO at $600 is the only choice for such use-cases.
Products such as the Transcend ESD310C and the OWC Envoy Pro Mini serve their own unique niche. These ‘SSD-in-a-stick’ products are compact, but still carry both Type-A and Type-C ports. The OWC model at $150 has a more pleasing case design and is more rugged, which is why it carries a premium over the Transcend one at $91. There are more options coming in this dual-interface segment, but these two are the currently recommended ones in the category.
For the absolute best performance, the SanDisk Professional PRO-G40 in Thunderbolt mode with write caching turned on delivers the goods. It is also compatible with legacy USB ports as a 1 GBps-class drive. At 10.5 ¢ / GB, the capabilities are going to cost a pretty penny. Pure Thunderbolt drives may offer better performance, but it has been quite some time since we saw one in the market. With USB4 in the picture, the envelop for the top category is getting pushed. ADATA is promising speeds as high as 3.8 GBps in the new SE920. The thermal solution is a challenge, and we will see how it plays out with tier-one vendors later this year.
Overall, we see Crucial’s PSSD lineup delivering good value for money across multiple categories. The downturn in the flash market was good for consumers, but that seems to have ended. Except for a couple of models (such as the 8TB Samsung T5 EVO), almost every other drive in the above list has shown a price increase – sometimes as high as 40%. Prices are expected to go up further over the next few quarters based on current flash spot prices (as they take some time to get reflected in the PSSD retail pricing.
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