PCWorld (USA)

Why you may not be getting the SSD you paid for

SSD vendors may change a product during its lifespan, not always for the better.

- BY JON L. JACOBI AND MELISSA RIOFRIO

The SSD you’ve bought may not be exactly the SSD you think it is. That’s because of a common vendor practice of swapping out internal parts due to supply, pricing pressure, or other reasons.

Usually this practice has focused on the NAND flash storage modules on SSDS, and the vendor has met or exceeded the promised specificat­ion. If the change is significan­t, the vendors have usually changed the SKU. But as Sean Webster of Tom’s Hardware discovered in his investigat­ion of the Adata XPG 8200 Pro ( go.pcworld.com/ sean), the company changed the SSD controller without changing the name— except the performanc­e changed, for the worse. There was no way of knowing the

difference from the outside.

Such practices leave both SSD buyers and we who review SSDS ( go.pcworld.com/rvsd) in the dark, with no idea of whether SSD performanc­e will be consistent throughout the life cycle of a product. So Pcworld reached out to the SSD vendors we cover to get more informatio­n. What we learned was mostly reassuring, but unfortunat­ely the onus remains upon the buyer to figure out what you’re getting.

CHANGE IS GOOD, MOST OF THE TIME

There are legitimate reasons for changing an SSD, most either benign or positive: bug fixes, firmware updates, faster components. No harm, no foul, though we’d also like a new revision number if changes are significan­t.

Supply issues may also lead to component changes, especially with smaller vendors who are picking parts off the shelf, as it were. Again, no harm, no foul.

However, one of the three Adata XPG8200 Pro NVME SSDS Tom’s Hardware looked at was about 300Mbps slower than the others. Foul.

According to one industry source who asked not to be named, Adata is not alone: Dataram, Kingspec, and Avant were also mentioned as having changed to inferior components at one point or another.

We’re not accusing any vendor of truly malevolent behavior. Stuff happens. But let’s just say the behavior is bad for users in the short term, and bad for the company’s reputation in the long run.

A WORD FROM THE VENDORS

Pcworld contacted all the SSD vendors mentioned in the Tom’s Hardware story, as well as others mentioned by our source, and any other major players, asking for more informatio­n about component stability and transparen­cy in labeling.

Alas, there was no hard comment from

Adata forthcomin­g in time for this article. But to their infinite credit, several vendors were more than willing to chime in, including Silicon Power. The company admitted to changing components, but promised that the product would still meet performanc­e claims. Apacer said the same about its pro and consumer lines, but said there would be no component changes in the company’s industrial line.

Fledging and OWC both said they alter model numbers and SKUS to reflect any changes. Sabrent and SK Hynix flat-out said they retain the same components. Assuming those company’s suppliers don’t fiddle about, that’s ideal. Note that SK Hynix is its own supplier, which makes it a lot easier.

Seagate said its products are

“designed to meet their stated performanc­e requiremen­ts.” Other larger vendors were less willing to engage. Responses varied from no-comment from Samsung and Kingston, to no response at all from Wd/sandisk. Crucial acknowledg­ed receipt of my email but had not responded further by the time of this writing.

We’ve reviewed products from all these vendors and never experience­d nor heard about their SSDS’ failing to perform as advertised. WD caught some flack recently ( go.pcworld.com/flak) over mislabeled

SMR HDDS, however, and Kingston is mentioned in the Tom’s Hardware article as having had an issue well in the past.

AS ALWAYS, CAVEAT EMPTOR

Vendors: We understand you might need to change components. All we’re asking is that you slap a revision number on it and make sure people can see it.

Users: If the drive you buy doesn’t seem to measure up, it may be because of a component change. And though it saddens me to say it, treat the performanc­e results you find in our SSD reviews ( go.pcworld.com/ rvsd) as a moment in time. We unfortunat­ely can’t guarantee that the drive you buy will be exactly the same as the one we reviewed. We hope it’s as-good or better.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Samsung’s 970 EVO Plus is the right way to go about things. Significan­t change, change the name. This came in handy when incompatib­ilities with Macs ensued.
Samsung’s 970 EVO Plus is the right way to go about things. Significan­t change, change the name. This came in handy when incompatib­ilities with Macs ensued.
 ??  ?? WD took some flack over mislabeled SMR HDDS.
WD took some flack over mislabeled SMR HDDS.

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