PCWorld (USA)

WD Blue 3D NAND SATA SSD: ONE of THE Fastest TLC Drives you can buy

TLC NAND has been a performanc­e drag, until now.

- BY JON L. JACOBI

Amaller form-factor means a larger and less aesthetica­lly pleasing machine. The WD Blue 3D SSD is a SATA SSD with a not-so-secret twin: Sandisk’s Ultra 3D SSD. They are in fact the same drive with different labels, WD owning Sandisk and all that. The ‘3D’ term means the drives use stacked (layered, vertical, etc.) NAND. Practicall­y speaking, that means more storage in less horizontal space.

The only real difference­s between the drives are the outward appearance, the marketing, and the fact that the WD Blue 3D ships in the M.2 form factor, while the Ultra 3D does not. Beyond that, they’re peas in a pod. Given their superior performanc­e compared to other TLC NAND drives—that’s a really good thing.

DESIGN AND CAPACITY

Though available in the 2.5-inch form factor, WD sent us the M.2 2280 (22mm wide/80mm long) Blue 3D, which is handy for upgrading laptops or desktops that feature an M.2 slot. It’s SATA, not Nvme—just to be clear. Be sure to check which flavor your M.2 slot is before you buy. Just FYI, NVME ( go.pcworld.com/n4me) is a lot faster.

The Blue 3D is available in 250GB, 500GB, 1TB (the size we tested), and 2TB capacities, which sell for $95, $165, $310,

and $620 respective­ly. Those are the prices from WD’S site—you may find them cheaper at Amazon, Newegg, or the like.

The Blue 3D is warrantied for three years and rated for 100TBW for every 250GB. That means WD expects you can write 100 terabytes to the drive before experienci­ng any loss of capacity due to wear and tear on the cells. If you do the math, that’s actually a heck of a lot of writes. Probably more than 10 years’ worth for most users. And TBW estimates are generally very conservati­ve.

Note that the 250GB version is rated slightly slower than the other capacities. That’s common with most drives of 250GB or less, which most often have fewer chips to spread data across.

SURPRISING­LY GOOD PERFORMANC­E

We test SSDS using both artificial benchmarks, primarily AS SSD and Crystaldis­kmark, and real-world copy tests.

We’re happy to report that somehow, to the benefit of users everywhere, Wd/sandisk has managed to create a TLC drive that can sustain 450Mbps performanc­e during long writes. Up until now, about the fastest sustained write speed we’ve seen out of a TLC drive after it oversteps it’s cache is 300Mbps. Indeed, after testing with our usual 20GB data set, we threw 320GB at the Blue 3D, and it just soldiered on at a steady 450Mbps. There may be a point at which the drive will slow down, but we didn’t see it.

By way of comparison, the Samsung 750 EVO ( go.pcworld.com/s750) drops to 300Mbps when it runs out of cache, was

considered good. Some drives, such as OCZ’S Trion 100 ( go.pcworld.com/t100) and even Toshiba’s latest TR200 ( go. pcworld.com/t200), drop to around 100Mbps—slower than hard drive speeds. Yowser.

Crystaldis­kmark tests the SSD with all caching engaged and is generally a good indicator of real life performanc­e. We run the test with 1GB, 5GB, and

32GB data sets.

Note that the Crucial BX300 ( go. pcworld.com/cbx3) is an MLC NANDbased drive, from which we nearly always see 450Mbps to 500Mbps writing simply because writing MLC’S two bits takes less time than TLC’S three bits. At least until now. The WD Blue 3D and Sandisk Ultra 3D keep up with it nicely.

The AS SSD benchmark issues the FUA (Force Unit Access—disabling caching in units that acknowledg­e the command) and is especially useful in determinin­g the bare-knuckle performanc­e of the controller and NAND. We run both AS SSD’S 1GB and 10GB tests, quoting the 10GB test results. As you can see in the chart shown above, the WD Blue 3D and its Sandisk

Ultra 3D twin mirror each other closely, and keep up with the Crucial BX300. They all make the well-regarded (but pricey) Samsung EVO 750 SSD look slow.

Our real-world tests consist of reading and writing both a 20GB single compressed archive and a 20GB set of small- to mid-sized files and folders, with the majority of the files being compressed types such as WMV, MP3, and JPG. The real-world copies can, and have, revealed issues like the slow sustained write speed of TLC that synthetic benchmarks can sometimes miss.

disclaimer­s concerning poor sustained write performanc­e. For the consumer, it means largecapac­ity 2TB SSDS with great all-around performanc­e.

VERDICT

We have nothing negative to say about the WD Blue 3D. Okay, the label is boring, which isn’t trivial if you’re building your own PC and want to show off all your hardware finery through the tempered-glass, Led-lit side of your case. But it’s fast, affordable, and available in up to 2TB capacities, and we’re impressed with whatever trick Sandisk/wd used to eliminate the MLC/TLC performanc­e gap.

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