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Intel 750 Series 2.5" SSD - Is NVMe the final answer?

2015-05-27
there are loads of rumors going around that Linus has a very very fast car but I actually have a very very fast SSD so I've got that going for me which is nice stay subscribed Linus tech tips for more videos on very very fast things the Coursera HX 1200 I power supply delivers 80 plus platinum efficiency for quiet efficient power for Corsair link digital and advanced monitoring and control click now to learn more so let's kick this off of the statement you won't often hear me repeating unless you've seen all the takes for this shot this is the fastest consumer SSD on the market this is the fastest consumer SSD on the market today this is the fastest consumer SSD on the market today HC our age so why do I keep tripping on things this is the fastest consumer SSD on the market today hands down there's been a lot of hype around these drives and now it's easy to understand why the Intel 750 series SSDs post some seriously ridiculous performance numbers thanks to Intel utilizing a controller based on the nvm Express protocol which is designed to replace the HCI architecture we've seen on SATA drives for a while now ABI was designed predominantly for spinning media or hard drives and vme has been developed entirely for non-volatile memory storage which means it doesn't have to deal with the extra weight and the legacy support built into HCI resulting in a more streamlined command set which can be which can work beautifully in parallelism which can benefit from modern multi-core CPUs but before we delve into the performance of these drives and the impact that nvme has had of course we need to talk about the drive itself we only have the 2.5 inch drive in office right now we may be getting a PCIe add-in card version for a special project that we have coming up soon so stay tuned and stay subscribe to the channel if you want to see all about that but it doesn't really matter because in terms of performance the add-in card and the 2.5 inch form factor drive both have the exact same components inside just with a different physical appearance layout and obviously the connector but why did they even create two versions of the same components more on that in just a moment first the physical overview the front is fairly reminiscent of past Intel enthusiasts SSDs but here we notice the first shift from gaming performance to data center performance the old skull logo has been replaced by serial numbers and product specs when we turn the drive to its side you'll notice a significant difference in thickness when compared to the previous generations of Intel SSDs it is not a thin drive by any means at 15 millimeters and because of that it will not fit into many height restricted SSD mounts just a heads up when we finally flip to the back of the drive we see one of the reasons why this drive is so thick the massive badass-looking heatsink no more super rough looking finish on the back of your intel SSD last but not least we have the 86 39 connector which splits twice to receive power through a standard SATA interface and to send data through an SFF 86 43 also known as mini SAS HD connector which finally connects to a hyper kit from asus now the hyper kit is quite a special little connector designed by asus which allows you to go from the mini SAS HD connector into the hyper kit module then into an m dot 2 interface which is able to fully connect to the PCIe gen3 lanes all the way directly to the cpu which is why it is able to offer the same amount of performance as the add-in card which is great because say you had an ITX 9 x99 motherboard that was compatible with the hyper kit you'd be able to have a powerful graphics card and an nvme drive which is pretty sick a quick reminder this is using PCIe lanes on your CPU which is great but something you may want to take into account for certain setups possibly SLI stuff things like that the drives will still be awesome if you have to connect it through something like the PCH considering you ran out of lanes but if you want the best possible performance you will want it to directly access the CPU through those PCIe lanes and with that all out of the way onto benchmarking we put the Intel 750 series up against an enthusiasts grade traditional-style if I can call it that SATA SSD the Samsung 850 Pro the 850 Pro is well regarded as a high-end SSD and honestly it's pretty badass but man it got absolutely destroyed by the until 750 series drive first up we have crystal fist mark which is the most important benchmark in our suite by far the reason for its importance is that Intel worked with the developers of crystal dis Marc to ensure that the program will be able to deploy multiple workers with the 750 series drives feeding directly into the CPU through the PCIe lanes you'll need a benchmarking worker per CPU thread including hyper threads to fully utilize the drive as you can see the 750 killed it getting 5 times faster sequential reads almost three times faster sequential writes both running on one thread seven freaking times faster 4k reads and a bit over four times faster 4k writes at eight threads on to more standard less optimised benchmarks we have the Intel drive with displayed reads five times greater than that of the Samsung Drive as well as write speeds approximately two and a half times greater than the Samsung drive in a doe disk mark the black magic disk speed test results were showed Intel having a read speed almost four times higher than its competitor and a write speed approximately two point four times greater now it is important to keep in mind that all of these tests are synthetic and different for various reasons and may not be perfectly representative of real-world situations we did attempt a few standard wheeled world SSD benchmarks but we ran into a fairly strange issue the Intel drive was simply too fast to produce meaningful results in our normal real-world test suite as it was bottlenecks by other components in our system in other real-world benchmarks we have attempted this wasn't really a problem and naturally we'll find ways to go around this but for now Dan so I guess that leads fairly well into our conclusion for this video this is a new drive for Mattel and it's ridiculously fast it is without a doubt the fastest consumer grade SSD on the market today but that speed does come at a cost and vme is still very new to the consumer space and if you don't want to take up a PCI slot on your motherboard the 2 and 5 inch drive with the hyper kit solution is the only currently officially supported by a few motherboards we haven't even received word yet on what other motherboard manufacturers will support this drive and even if they do we have no clue when their solutions will be available what do you guys think of nvme let me know in the comments down below or honestly preferably over on the forum but while you're here before you go to the forum like dislike favorite subscribe share all that kind of fun stuff in the 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