Samsung SM951-NVMe (256GB) PCIe SSD Review
by Kristian Vättö on June 25, 2015 9:40 AM ESTAnandTech Storage Bench - Light
The Light trace is designed to be an accurate illustration of basic usage. It's basically a subset of the Heavy trace, but we've left out some workloads to reduce the writes and make it more read intensive in general. Please refer to this article for full details of the test.
Under light workloads the NVMe version manages to pull a bigger lead with close to 20% reduction in average latency and 10% increase in average data rate. This is also the benchmark where the SM951 really shows its client focus because the SSD 750 is considerably slower in both data rate and latency.
74 Comments
View All Comments
patrickjp93 - Thursday, June 25, 2015 - link
They aren't all storage transfer commands go through the PCH. Your PCIe SSDs do not connect to the CPU directly in most cases. Some enterprise grade drives do, but most consumer do not.Kristian Vättö - Friday, June 26, 2015 - link
PCIe is PCIe regardless of whether the controller is inside the CPU or PCH. PCH merely acts as a hub for different interfaces, but ultimately it connects to the CPU as well since that is where all the processing is done.CajunArson - Thursday, June 25, 2015 - link
Yeah so are we missing some sound and FURY [hint hint] about this SSD on a stick?Kristian Vättö - Thursday, June 25, 2015 - link
Fury X is coming, Ryan just needed one more day because the flu has been undermining his ability to work.DigitalFreak - Thursday, June 25, 2015 - link
(hint hint) The 980ti is faster than the Fury X all around.CajunArson - Thursday, June 25, 2015 - link
I'm not disagreeing with that statement.I just want the review.
lilmoe - Thursday, June 25, 2015 - link
+1A DX12 showdown between FuryX and 980ti would be highly welcome as well.
Gigaplex - Thursday, June 25, 2015 - link
The Fury X wins in some of the 4k tests. The 980Ti seems faster overall, but it's not "all around".mr_tawan - Friday, June 26, 2015 - link
From what I've read, it looks like the Fury has advantages when it comes to memory-intensive use case.SofS - Thursday, June 25, 2015 - link
About the driver issue, how do different operating systems fare? Like 32/64 bits, XP/7/8/10 and Linux old/new (for instance CentOS/Fedora).