- Inland premium 1tb diskmark upgrade#
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I often wonder why Kyle doesn't license HardOCP for some of these products.
I think most of these companies however, just don't do that.Īlso, if anyone of us had 30k, 40K, something substantial, maybe even just 20K, we could order these drives from Taiwan, the factory making these and place an order and then provide our own branding and packaging, web site and start selling them. I might reach out to Inland and give them the updated numbers and ask if they can comment on who makes this drive, or, any other information that I could share with the community. I'm guessing that's why there are errors on this obviously first version of the products blister pack packaging. This product has only been out a handful of weeks with very limited stock. Well, the read speed is wrong as well now that I took a 2nd look at the packaging. The write speed is wrong but the world "premium" is there. I think I did mention the packaging had errors but I should have been a bit more specific as to what those errors were exactly.
Inland premium 1tb diskmark upgrade#
I also contacted Phison to ask them about their firmware tool, firmware efforts and having the ability to upgrade my Inland 1TB NVMe Premium drive. It's based off the controller, not the branding. Kinda how nVidia provides their boards to other companies who then brand and package them, etc.Īlso, the Mydigital firmware tool is a rebranded Phison tool. I don't think there are 20 different companies all designing and manufacturing individual SSD's using this new Phison E12 controller. The system communicates with it through PCIe bus and connects to the built-in PCIe controller of the chipset or processor, so the signal transfer is as simple, precise as point to point, that offers you a pleasant high-performance transfer experience, without a bit of lag or delay. Same chips, layout but different branding and firmware / bios provising ( I think ) I'm fairly certain it's just one company putting a majority of these out, possibly two. MP34 M.2 PCIe SSD supports the latest NVMe1.3 protocol. I saw 4 different branded SSD's, same controller, but same exact PCB during my research 10 or so days ago. The Mydigital is a 960GB drive btw, not 1TB, but, same Phison controller. It's cheaper for companies to just get them in on bulk from someone else and then brand, package these drives.
Inland premium 1tb diskmark pro#
Samsung now offers a warranty of 5 years across the suite of 970 SSDs and specifically a generous write endurance of 150 TBW on the 250 GB 970 Evo, thereby challenging the need for the 970 Pro MLC variant.The Inland is just a rebranded OEM, so is the Mydigital. The anticipated modest performance improvement between generations is expected to maintain Samsung’s front running as the premium SSD brand.
Further benchmarks are required before we can attest to its overall performance in the real world. The $120 250GB 970 Evo has an advertised sequential read speed of up to 3400 MB/s ( 200MB/s faster than the 250GB 960 Evo) and a sequential write speed of 1500 MB/s which drops to 300 MB/s once the 13Gb of SLC cache has been exhausted (this is similar to the sustained write performance on the 960 Evo). The 1TB model is clearly handicapped on some performance metrics compared to the 2TB model, but.
Inland premium 1tb diskmark plus#
The 970 Evo comes in a M.2 form factor and four sizes: 250GB, 500GB, 1TB and 2TB. The Inland Performance Plus does not quite hit the theoretical limits of the Phison E18 controller. It employs the latest Samsung Phoenix controller and their latest version of TLC 3D NAND (now 64-layers) which is cheaper but with slightly lower endurance and weaker write consistency than the MLC NAND found in the 970 Pro. The 970 Evo is Samsung’s third generation NVMe PCIe SSD for high-end consumers and professionals alike.