spdfreak
Senior member
- Mar 6, 2000
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I picked up a few of those as well. So far, seems OK in the build today, but Windows Update did sit at 74% on the Cumulative Update, for like 5-10 minutes, it felt like.I just got a Team Group MP33 SSD NVMe 1.3 Gen3 x4 256GB drive for $32.99 last week. This will go into an Asrock B250 with a Pentium 4560. The Read 1,800MB and the write 1,500MB. Will report back on the performance once installed.
That's more of a Windows/hardware thing.I picked up a few of those as well. So far, seems OK in the build today, but Windows Update did sit at 74% on the Cumulative Update, for like 5-10 minutes, it felt like.
I built two (B250) http://asrock.com/MB/Intel/B250 Pro4/index.asp for my parents in 2017. One has a 4560 and the other has a fairly rare 4620. Both use the integrated graphics. Both have 240GB SSD's. One will now have an M.2 drive. Eventually I will put in a graphics card in my dad's unit. The funny thing, both have Thermalright Ultra 120's from old builds of mine. Dual core CPU's with the original Ultra 120. I even have a Ultra 92mm somewhere in my garage. I found another Ultra 120 in my garage and a 212+ NIB. I have been organizing my garage recently.I picked up a few of those as well. So far, seems OK in the build today, but Windows Update did sit at 74% on the Cumulative Update, for like 5-10 minutes, it felt like.
Edit: Oh yeah, G4560 represent!. Is this a budget gaming rig, or a basic desktop / browser box?
Mushkin Enhanced RAW Series 2.5" 960GB SATA III 3D TLC Internal Solid State Drive (SSD) MKNSSDRW960GB $77.99
If you look at the pricing for WD Black HDDs, if these 1TB TLC SSDs drop any lower, WD is going to have to cancel the entire model line, IMHO. Or drop prices in line with "normal" drives. Since WD seems to believe that 7200RPM drives deserve a 200% price premium over 5400RPM HDDs. (Seagate and Toshiba do not think that way, you can get 1-2-3TB 7200RPM drives from both companies for "normal" HDD prices.)I couldn't find any benchmarks for this drive, but 3D TLC flash has great performance capability. The Silicon Motion SM2259XT controller is DRAM-less but at this price, it's worth upgrading from a mechanical hard drive even if it's a bit slower in some tests than other SSDs. I was actually looking for an SSHD hybrid drive but this is even better.
If you look at the pricing for WD Black HDDs, if these 1TB TLC SSDs drop any lower, WD is going to have to cancel the entire model line, IMHO. Or drop prices in line with "normal" drives. Since WD seems to believe that 7200RPM drives deserve a 200% price premium over 5400RPM HDDs. (Seagate and Toshiba do not think that way, you can get 1-2-3TB 7200RPM drives from both companies for "normal" HDD prices.)
But the writing's on the wall.
The main drive in my PC is a Western Digital Black 640GB that has 93967 (10.7 years) power on hours!You're paying for the WD Black's 5 year warranty at this point. Which pricing wise really should be around $60-65 tops. That or drop it down to $50 with a two year warranty. Seagate has them beat with the $50-60 for a 2TB 7200rpm drive.
The main drive in my PC is a Western Digital Black 640GB that has 93967 (10.7 years) power on hours!
Team Group EX2 2.5" 512GB SATA III Internal Solid State Drive (SSD) T253E2512G0C101 $52.99
Are you a human?
www.newegg.com
New model? Curious about it, it says "Elite" on it, hehe.
PNY CS900 240GB 2.5” SATA III Internal Solid State Drive (SSD) - (SSD7CS900-240-RB) - $28.99 w/free shipping for Amazon Prime.
They also have the 250GB model for $29.99, 480GB model for $49.99, 500GB model for $54.99, 960GB model for $89.99, and 1TB model for $92.99 on the same webpage.
I would think the 480GB model is a different technology than the 500GB model...
I have a new old (14 year-old in fact) original Mac Pro that I'm sprucing up just for fun...
Just how bad are the DRAM-less SSDs, in terms of basic business desktop performance? I don't care about wear since I won't putting a lot of hours on it, and I don't need much storage space either...
OK, maybe I'll just order the BX500 or something similar, just as a test. What better way to test than on a real-life machine?I don't know if I can objectively answer your question, "How bad are they?" But here's my advice. If you want to save money, get a nice entry level drive and it will blow away any hard drive you compare it against. If you're going to fret over performance, then spend the extra $20 and get a better drive that will make you happy. Every old PC you try to upgrade ends up being a money pit but the satisfaction is worth it.
Yeah, if you update the firmware, you can put in new quad-core Xeons, to make an 8-core machine. I was looking online at the 2.33 GHz Xeon E5345 and it turns out you can get these 80W chips for just US$20 shipped, for TWO of them, so just ten bucks each. I figure 80 W would be a good compromise.I wonder if you could replace those Xeon 5150s with a couple of quad core Xeon L5430s? Surprisingly, their TDP is lower.