PCWorld (USA)

Samsung 870 EVO SATA SSD: The speed you need, at sane prices

Excellent performanc­e and endurance ratings for a competitiv­e price.

- BY JON L. JACOBI

Samsung’s been at the top of the SSD storage food chain since the day the company entered the market, and the 870 EVO honors that tradition. It’s the fastest SATA SSD we’ve tested, it’s available in up to 4TB of capacity, and it’s exceedingl­y affordable given its speed.

SPECS AND PRICING

The 870 EVO is a 2.5-inch, SATA 6Gbps SSD employing Samsung’s own TLC (Triple-level

Cell/3-bit) V-NAND. The company is typically coy as to the actual controller technology or number of layers, but it’s likely an in-house Samsung-designed controller with, judging from the capacities, 92 or 96 layers.

The drive will ship in 250GB for $40, 500GB for $70, 1TB for $130, 2TB for $250, and 4TB for $480 flavors. There’s 512MB of primary DRAM cache for every 250GB of capacity, and the drives are rated for 150TBW (Terabytes that may be Written) or five years of service—whichever comes first. That is, the

five-year warranty is invalid once you exceed the TBW rating. Most end users won’t come close to writing that much data, so you can consider it five years.

The 870 EVO uses Samsung’s Turbowrite variable secondary cache algorithm, in which the main NAND is treated as SLC by writing only a single bit per voltage level. That should allow top write performanc­e until the drive nears full capacity. As a rule of thumb, you should stay below 75 percent of capacity when using SSDS or performanc­e will suffer.

PERFORMANC­E

The 870 EVO proved to be the fastest overall SATA SSD we’ve tested so far, largely due to its superior performanc­e with small files. We’re not talking the same kind of difference you’ll see with far faster NVME technology—6gbps

SATA itself is the limiting technology. Numbers are very similar for all top-tier SATA drives. That said, the 870 EVO will cut a second or two off

a lot of tasks, and over the long run that will add up.

Note that I included the 2019-era Seagate Ironwolf 110 ( go.pcworld.com/iwlf) in the test comparison­s, as it’s one of the few drives that can keep up with the 870 EVO in all phases. However, it’s significan­tly more expensive and designed for SMB or the enterprise.

As you can see left, there’s scant difference among the competitor­s when it comes to sustained write or read performanc­e. However, as you can see below, design prowess and components can, and do, make a difference in random and small file performanc­e.

As in the Crystaldis­kmark 6 sustained

throughput test, the difference­s between the drives in our 48GB transfers were slight. The 870 EVO still took home the win by 12 seconds, or about 2 percent.

On the next page, you can see why the 870 EVO is a bit pricier than the 870 QVO: The latter slows down to a miserable 150Mbps when it runs out of secondary

NAND cache. The 870 QVO doesn’t allocate NAND as secondary cache dynamicall­y, as does the 870 EVO.

The 450GB write was performed on both the 1TB and 4TB models, resulting in a 5-second difference, which is well within the expected variation. That means the Turbowrite is doing its job on the larger capacities. You might see a slowdown with the 500GB model, though it shouldn’t be as drastic with the Tlc-based EVO as it is with the QLC in the 870 QVO.

BOTTOM LINE

The Samsung 870 EVO is easily the best performer in its class and a top performer in any class across all usage scenarios. If you never write very large files, you could opt for the cheaper 870 QVO. Just make sure you go for a capacity well beyond what you think you’ll need. If you’re not strapped for cash, the 870 EVO is easily the better drive, the more futureproo­f of the two, and our recommenda­tion.

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 ??  ?? Samsung’s 870 EVO is a step up from the 870 QVO in terms of overall performanc­e, albeit at a higher price.
Samsung’s 870 EVO is a step up from the 870 QVO in terms of overall performanc­e, albeit at a higher price.
 ??  ?? Sustained reading and writing are limited by the SATA bus, hence the statistica­lly meaningles­s difference­s shown here. But check the 450GB test to see where the 870 QVO falls behind.
Sustained reading and writing are limited by the SATA bus, hence the statistica­lly meaningles­s difference­s shown here. But check the 450GB test to see where the 870 QVO falls behind.
 ??  ?? The 870 QVO offers outstandin­g small file performanc­e, only losing out in some tests to its QVO cousin.
The 870 QVO offers outstandin­g small file performanc­e, only losing out in some tests to its QVO cousin.
 ??  ?? The Samsung 870 EVO was the fastest overall in our real world 48GB transfers, though by a relatively small margin.
The Samsung 870 EVO was the fastest overall in our real world 48GB transfers, though by a relatively small margin.
 ??  ?? This is why you might want to spend more money on an EVO (or the others) rather than a QVO. But if long writes aren’t something you do, don’t sweat it. Note that this was the 2TB version of the QVO; the 8TB version would have more secondary NAND cache and would not slow down as soon.
This is why you might want to spend more money on an EVO (or the others) rather than a QVO. But if long writes aren’t something you do, don’t sweat it. Note that this was the 2TB version of the QVO; the 8TB version would have more secondary NAND cache and would not slow down as soon.
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