Linux Format

Crucial MX500 SSD.

If you’re planning to store your data on anything, Jeremy Laird thinks that you’re best going with the device with an extra two years of warranty.

- LXF

Want the biggest SSD at the lowest price, but still have all the speed? Let us introduce you to the Crucial MX500, a SATA-based option that offers everything you need.

The march of technology waits for no man. Unless the poor sap in question relies upon the SATA interface for his PC storage connectivi­ty. In which case, technology is happy to sit down and soak up the view. That’s because of the limitation­s associated with SATA.

First, there’s a hard bandwidth limit of around 550MB/s, net of overheads. Then there’s the fact that SATA is reliant on the AHCI control protocol, which hails from the mists of 2004. Critically, it also means that AHCI was never conceived with solid-state storage in mind. It was designed to suit magnetic drives and read heads, not NAND chips.

One of the more obvious upshots is the practical cap it puts on random access performanc­e. AHCI isn’t optimised to enable SSDs to give their best when it comes to random access performanc­e. With that long-winded preamble in mind, may we present Crucial’s newest SSD, the MX500.

It’s a plain old SATA drive, so all of the above limitation­s apply. Not that this should be a huge surprise, given Crucial is yet to launch a PCI Expressbas­ed drive for consumers that supports the more modern NVMe control protocol. That, in turn, reflects the fact that the market for add-in drives such as this remains dominated by SATA, regardless of its limitation­s.

The MX500 does bring some substantia­l hardware changes to Crucial’s flagship line of SSDs. It gets parent company Micron’s new 64-layer 3D TLC NAND memory. Just as key is the switch from Marvell to Silicon Motion for the controller chipset. That said, the raw specificat­ions are little changed over the previous MX300 drive – and, indeed, the MX200 before that.

The exceptions include a muchimprov­ed 350TB data endurance rating, and an upping of the warranty from three to five years. It’s the latter that marks out the MX500 as a drive that can trade blows with premium SATA offerings.

Solid benchmarks

The MX500 delivers solid, if predictabl­e, numbers in the bulk of our benchmarks. Peak reads rock in at 564MB/s, writes at 522MB/s. Random writes of 39MB/s are decent for a SATA drive, ditto the 99MB/s for random writes, even if the latter is a little slower than Crucial’s own BX300 budget drive. You can say the same for our internal file copy test.

In reality, most of those numbers are fairly academic, in that they’re free from obvious flaws. The same goes for our subjective experience with the drive shunting data around. It doesn’t suffer from any obvious glitches or the infuriatin­g cache-related slowdowns that some drives exhibit. That’s true despite the fact that the MX500 has an SLC write caching mode, designed to accelerate “bursty” workloads. We didn’t find a usage scenario where we could detect its limitation­s.

If the new MX500 therefore establishe­s itself as a solid all-around SATA SSD, the final test involves bang for buck. As we go to press, this 500GB iteration can be had for just £119. That’s seriously competitiv­e for a drive with such solid performanc­e and a five-year warranty. It’s not often that a SATA drive makes such a compelling case for itself. But the price and that five-year cover are a killer combo. It really is hard to think of many convincing reasons to buy anything else, unless absolute performanc­e is key, but then why are you looking at a SATA drive?!

 ??  ?? Pop this pocket rocket into your system for superlativ­e and longed-lived storage.
Pop this pocket rocket into your system for superlativ­e and longed-lived storage.
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