APC Australia

Samsung 960 Evo 250GB

Proof that a smaller cache comes at a cost.

- Jeremy Laird

Samsung’s premium Pro drives are pretty much the go-to SSDs for enthusiast­s seeking the best in solid-state storage performanc­e. The latest 960 Pro is a barnstorme­r of an SSD. But it ain’t cheap. In 512GB M.2 configurat­ion — the smallest option — it rocks in at $449. That’s where the 960 Evo steps in, again in M.2 format. Like previous Evo models, it gives you much of that Samsung SSD goodness, just in a more affordable package, in theory.

The core specs look promising. You can have it in 250GB format, as tested, which brings the price down dramatical­ly, at well under half the price of the smallest Pro. The Evo also comes with the Polaris controller chip — Samsung’s latest — with which comes support for both quad-lane PCI Express 4.0 connectivi­ty and the solid-state-friendly NVMe control protocol.

Where things begin to differ involves the flash memory. Both drives sport Samsung’s cutting-edge V-NAND, so-called because of the layers (48 of them) of memory cells, stacked vertically atop one another. The difference with the Evo compared to the Pro is that it gets triple-level cell memory to the Pro’s duallevel. The former makes for greater data density and thus lower prices. But it also comes at a cost to both performanc­e and durability.

In terms of the official specs, the peak sequential numbers look solid at first glance. Samsung says it’s good for 3.2GB/s reads and 1.5GB/s writes. The latter is a fair distance off the 2.1GB/s of the smallest 960 Pro, for instance, but it’s still a big old number.

Look closely at the spec sheet, however, and you’ll note that write performanc­e is enabled by the SLC write cache, a block of flash memory running in singleleve­l mode and acting as a write buffer. For this 250GB drive, it measures 13GB. If you exhaust the cache, performanc­e drops off dramatical­ly. Samsung says sustained performanc­e once the cache is filled comes in at just 300MB/s. Yikes.

Drive endurance, meanwhile, tumbles from 400TB for the entry-level 960 Pro to 100TB. Samsung clips the Evo’s warranty down to three years from the Pro’s five, too. That said, there’s less collateral damage to the cost-cutting when it comes to random access performanc­e. The Evo 250GB is good for 330K IOPS reads and 300K writes.

The Evo delivers on its claimed peak performanc­e in a benchmark like ATTO, with 3.2GB/s reads and 1.5GB/s writes. More nuanced metrics that sidestep tricks such as on-the-fly compressio­n, however, show the limitation­s of the Evo’s cost-conscious config. For starters, it only musters around 1.7GB/s reads in CrystalMar­k’s sequential benchmark.

The more revealing measure is the 89 seconds the Evo needs to motor through our 30GB internal file copy test — roughly twice as long as the Pro. On the other hand, the Evo is seriously slick in CrystalMar­k’s 4K random access tests.

How much you’re worried by the patchy sequential performanc­e depends on your workloads. The Evo is still fast, but if you routinely shunt large files around, you will inevitably keep bumping into the limitation­s of that SLC cache. Those caveats aside, this is a nice little M.2 drive from arguably the best in the SSD business.

“It gives you much of that Samsung SSD goodness, just in a more affordable package, in theory.”

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M.2 NVME SSD

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