PCWorld (USA)

WD Black AN1500 SSD: Dual drives double the performanc­e

The WD Black AN1500 SSD pairs two NVME SSDS on a RAID 0 PCIE card to deliver twice the benchmark performanc­e of a single M.2 NVME SSD.

- BY JON L. JACOBI

If you’re interested in a single 2.5-inch or M.2 SSD for upgrading your system or laptop, you can skip this article. The WD Black AN1500 reviewed here is a full-sized, x8 PCIE 3.0 card for use in gaming or creative Pcs—with the goal of bringing near-pcie 4.0 performanc­e to PCIE 3.0 computers.

In synthetic benchmarks, it gets darn close with 6.5Gbps reading and well over 4Gbps writing. That could be good news for those that opted for Intel over AMD Ryzen in their

gaming or video rigs, but read the performanc­e section closely.

DESIGN AND SPECS

I led with the informatio­n that the AN1500 is an x8 (eight lane) PCIE card. It ships with a large heat spreader covering the entire board, sporting a ring of programmab­le RGB lighting around the edge. The RGB is compatible with all major standards and controllab­le via WD’S included app.

Beyond that, there are two SN750 ( go. pcworld.com/s75o) M.2 SSDS on board configured in RAID 0. RAID 0 is a way of setting up multiple drives in a system and distributi­ng, or “striping,” data evenly across all the drives in the array. In this case, with two drives, that means half the data is written to one drive, and half to the other. This is basically done simultaneo­usly, hence the colossal uptick in both reading and writing. Twice the pipes, twice the chips, twice the sustained performanc­e. Generally speaking.

While RAID 0 is very fast, it offers no redundancy. SSDS are extremely reliable these days, but two drives in RAID 0 effectivel­y doubles your failure points. In practical terms, don’t rely on the AN1500 for storing irreplacea­ble data unless you back it up regularly.

The AN1500 will be available in 1TB/$300, 2TB/$550 (tested), and 4TB/$1000 flavors. Single 2TB NVME SSDS generally run from $250 to $350, so you’re paying roughly twice as much for the WD Black AN1500.

A five-year warranty backs the drives, but there’s no TBW (Terabytes Written—over the life of the drive) rating as you’ll find with single drives. However, the SN750 used inside is rated for 600TBW per terabyte of capacity. Bottom line, while you wouldn’t want to use an AN1500 as the tip of the storage spear in a high-transactio­n server, you needn’t worry about wearing it out during normal use.

PERFORMANC­E

The AN1500 performs as advertised, at least on synthetic benchmarks. Real-life 48GB transfers generally didn’t stack up to PCIE 4.0, though our PCIE 3.0 testbed (see below) is now quite a few generation­s older than our PCIE 4.0 testbed. Because of that, I also tested on the latter to see what the

card could do with a modern CPU. Turns out, it made quite a bit of difference, as you’ll see in the chart.

The AN1500 didn’t do particular­ly well in our 48GB transfer tests, falling slightly behind Samsung’s 980 Pro over PCIE 3.0. With a more modern AMD Ryzen 3700X over the PCIE 4 bus (still operating at PCIE 3.0 speeds), the story changed drasticall­y. Note that these numbers are from two completely different testbeds and while indicative, are not directly or concretely comparable.

The 450GB write test below proves three things: The AN1500 is much faster writing large files on a Ryzen 7 3700X/PCIE 4.0 system than on a Core I7-5820/PCIE 3.0

system; it’s easily the fastest drive we’ve tested with the long write; and the 2TB version of the AN1500 I tested is unlikely to run out of cache during any operation.

Note this may change as the drive fills up, as with any SSD. You should allow for 25 percent free space when buying, just to make sure there’s always enough NAND for uses as secondary cache for long copies.

Note that our PCIE 4.0 testing is on AMD’S first-gen implementa­tion, and there are no doubt improvemen­ts on the horizon.

The PCIE 3 tests utilized Windows 10 64-bit running on a Core i7-5820k/asus X99 Deluxe system with four 16GB Kingston 2666MHZ DDR4 modules, a Zotac (Nvidia) GT 710 1GB x2 PCIE graphics card, and an

Asmedia ASM2142 USB 3.1 card. It also contains a Gigabyte Gc-alpine Thunderbol­t 3 card, and Softperfec­t Ramdisk 3.4.6 for the 48GB read and write tests.

The PCIE 4 testing was done on an MSI MEG X570 motherboar­d socketing an AMD Ryzen 7 3700X 8-core CPU and using the same Kingston DDR and software.

BOTTOM LINE

Faster is always better—less time wasted, more life tasted. The AN1500 delivers an improvemen­t, though it’s not always subjective­ly apparent and is likely not to be worth the extra cash for the average user.

Still, there is a boost, so for those with bleeding-edge needs and deep pockets it will deliver at least a modest performanc­e boost over PCIE 3.0. It also looks nice in the case. A recent-vintage CPU will optimize the gains.

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 ??  ?? Over PCIE 3 the AN1500 didn’t perform particular­ly well in our 48GB small file and folder tests. This may be overhead from RAID 0, it may be something else. It’s basically on a par with the average single PCIE 3.0 NVME SSD.
Over PCIE 3 the AN1500 didn’t perform particular­ly well in our 48GB small file and folder tests. This may be overhead from RAID 0, it may be something else. It’s basically on a par with the average single PCIE 3.0 NVME SSD.
 ??  ?? Under Crystaldis­kmark 6, the AN1500 shows a definite improvemen­t in performanc­e over a single drive (the Samsung 980 Pro) under PCIE 3.0.
Under Crystaldis­kmark 6, the AN1500 shows a definite improvemen­t in performanc­e over a single drive (the Samsung 980 Pro) under PCIE 3.0.
 ??  ?? Normally, we include this test to show how soon a drive runs out of cache, and how much that slows the drive. However, in this case, it shows that the card is actually capable of much better real-world performanc­e with a modern CPU (Ryzen 3700X) as opposed to one several years old (Core i7-5820).
Normally, we include this test to show how soon a drive runs out of cache, and how much that slows the drive. However, in this case, it shows that the card is actually capable of much better real-world performanc­e with a modern CPU (Ryzen 3700X) as opposed to one several years old (Core i7-5820).

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