I am going to go for the Adata S511 60gb drive. If I have any issues, it comes with a 3 year warranty. I will update this thread when I have it and have installed windows on it and let people know how it goes.
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I am going to go for the Adata S511 60gb drive. If I have any issues, it comes with a 3 year warranty. I will update this thread when I have it and have installed windows on it and let people know how it goes.
The Kingston SSD has now gone down in price to around £83:
http://www.hotukdeals.com/deals/king...per-gb/1000103
I assumed your friend had Windows 7. Is that correct?
I'd consider the 96GB Kingston as currently £83 at ebuyer for bare drive. Could also try getting a small cash back too using Topcashback.
I am not sure I understand what you are saying :)
You expect Corsair to sell both Force Series GT and Force Series 3 at the same price?
I agree with you that synchronous NAND is faster than asynchronous NAND but more than 90% of PC users will not notice the difference in speed between these two types of NAND.
SSD manufacturers are trying to offer something for everyone
Enthusiast - synchronous NAND and Toggle NAND
Budget - asynchronous NAND
OWC recently upgraded Mercury Extreme Pro 6G to 32nm Toggle NAND. OWC also upgraded their 240GB and 480GB Mercury Extreme Pro 6G to SandForce SF-2282 controller. These SSDs are targeted at the enthusiast market
What do you mean by mis-selling of the NAND type?
Quote:
Looking at the read performance across the two drives we see that the synchronous flash model is superior in all tests. The amount isn’t that much though and I chose these specific drives since they show the greatest distinction in most of the tests. Other drive pairs were much closer together.
HardOCP could have included results from other SSDs they tested. We do not even know what SSDs were tested.Quote:
I could have shown a better result in the write test with a different drive that is capable of delivering up to 260MB/s with synchronous flash. I wanted to use the same pair of drives for all the tests though. This particular synchronous flash drive with this firmware only managed to outperform the asynchronous model by 30MB/s but more performance has come from newer models shipping with the latest firmware.
Am I missing something?
Is easier to compare Force Series GT and Force Series 3
Quote:
Our benchmarks thus far have shown Patriot's 120GB Wildfire to be a step ahead of Corsair's 120GB Force GT, but how does that theoretical performance translate to real-world scenarios?
According to PCMark's simulated tests, there's very little in it, and this set of results reiterates a truth that's applicable to a lot of users; during everyday use, you'll find it difficult to distinguish between the £240 Wildfire, the £200 Force GT and the £160 Force Series 3 - they're all suitably fast.
Note: Members are required to have a minimum of 5 posts before they can post any URL'sQuote:
Somewhat surprisingly, Corsair's Force GT doesn't aim for the top - it instead chooses to sit between the aforementioned drives with a £200 asking fee and excellent overall performance. Outfitted with 25nm synchronous NAND, the Force GT can struggle to keep up with rival solutions armed with Toshiba's premium Toggle Mode NAND, but the drive's ability is nonetheless impressive and it's comfortably quicker than the Force Series 3 in almost all of our benchmarks. Put two together in RAID and the results can be staggering.
Thanks Zak, but it's too expensive. He's looking at more like £70-£90, and £100 is absolutely the top end. Right now, the Kingston 96GB looks like his best bet.
As for me wanting one, not at that price, or anything near it. They're not worth it to me. With a 2TB HD at about £50, I'm simply not paying £113 for 80GB. The capacity is useful to me, and I don't care at all about the speed difference. At, what, 2.5p/GB for HD and £1.41/GB for that Intel SSD, they're some 56 times the price. For me, SSDs are way too small, and way, WAY too expensive.
Not trying to sell a SSD to you :)
SSDs have been around since 1989 IIRC.
Capacity has increased and price has decreased
OCZ has a RevoDrive 3 X2 960GB SSD
Prices of Intel SSDs over the years
X25-M Gen 1 - 80GB $345,160GB $600
X25-M Gen 2 - 80GB $225,160GB $440.
SSD 320 - 80GB $159, 160GB $289
Most people use SSD as primary drive and HDD as secondary drive
They have the best of both worlds, speed and capacity :)
SSDs is a luxury item for most people (including me)
http://www.shop.bt.com/products/king...rive-7G0Z.html
3% Quidco makes it £77.59
(Incidentally, I almost fell off my chair when I saw Saracen posting a thread about a SSD - thankfully it's not for him else I'd know the apocalypse was nigh)
Crucial C300 refurbs - http://www.crucial.com/uk/promo/inde...721&PID=582776
64GB £46.08
128GB £92.16
Worth the risk on a 30day warranty?....
..but £42.85 after Quidco ;)