Monday 24 October 2016

Adata SSD Ultimate SU800

3D as a buzzword has taken a bit of a knock recently in the home entertainment sector, but it crops up in the marketing material of a product you might not expect – a solid state hard drive.

Adata is making a big deal of 3D NAND flash, which it claims allows it to cram in more storage capacity, higher efficiency and faster read and write speeds. It also claims that 3D NAND flash makes its drives more energy efficient, and therefore cheaper to run.

So does its 3D NAND flash make the Adata SSD Ultimate SU800 stand out from the crowd? Or is it just marketing bluster? Read on to find out.

 Features and specification 

Although we tested the 256GB capacity Adata SSD Ultimate SU800, the drive comes in a range of capacities between 128GB to an impressive 1TB, which means if you’re set on the drive, you have the choice of what capacity you want depending on what you need it for. So if you’re looking for an SSD to serve as a boot drive, then a lower capacity model would be for you, and if you wanted to combine speed and file storage in one 2.5-inch drive, the larger capacities would suit your needs.

Adata is very confident of the read/write speeds of the SU800, boasting maximum read speeds of 560MB/s and write speeds of 520MB/s. To put this in perspective, a traditional HDD averages 110MB/s read and write, so you’re looking at theoretical speed increases of up to 500%.

While in use, the Adata SSD Ultimate SU800 averages a power draw of 0.65w, a drop from traditional 2.5-inch HDD’s and their average 3.2w. The power draw when idle is just 12mW, which makes the Adata SSD Ultimate SU800 a good choice if you want your device to keep a low energy consumption overall. As the Adata SSD Ultimate SU800 is a 2.5-inch drive, it’s suitable for laptops, where lower power consumption equals longer battery life, so we’re pleased to see the attention to lowering power consumption that Adata has lavished on the SSD Ultimate SU800.

The Adata SSD Ultimate SU800 also comes with free downloads of Adata’s own SSD Toolbox program, as well as a migration utility to help you swap over from your previous drive. The software itself does the job well, even if the user interface isn’t the most refined we’ve seen.

 Performance

So how does the Adata SSD Ultimate SU800 perform? Remarkably well, in fact, when put through the paces of our various benchmarks. In the Crystal Disk Mark benchmark it scored speeds of 562.6MB/s sequential read, and 507.6MB/s write, which is not too far off the speeds Adata promises. In the ATTO disk benchmark, which tests how fast a disk reads and writes data in various sizes, the Adata SSD Ultimate SU800 scored 562MB/s read and 515MB/s write. 

These scores are largely in line with what most modern SATA III SSDs can achieve, so while 3D NAND doesn’t bring any major speed increases, it does mean that the Adata SSD Ultimate SU800 can easily hold its own against more expensive SSDs from established names.

In our PCMark 8 benchmark, the Adata SSD Ultimate SU800 scored 4960, which is almost identical to the more expensive Kingston SSDNow KC400’s score, again proving that while Adata isn’t as recognisable a name as Kingston, it can go toe-to-toe when it comes to performance. 

The Adata SSD Ultimate SU800 is a perfectly fine card that is capable of performance levels seen in more expensive SSDs. For the 256GB model we tested, the asking price is $80 (around £65, AU$105), which works out at $0.31 per gigabyte – a very attractive proposition. 

The Adata SSD Ultimate SU800 also comes in 128GB, 512GB and 1TB configurations as well, with the Adata SSD Ultimate SU800 1TB costing $270 (around £220, AU$355), which lowers the price or gigabyte to $0.27.

 We liked

The price and performance of this drive is great, so if you’re looking for a budget SSD then you can buy this one safe in the knowledge that you’re not sacrificing speed or features for a lower price.

We didn’t like

If you want faster speeds than the ones offered here, then you’re going to have to look at far more expensive M.2 and PCI E SSDs, as we’re reaching the limit of what SATA III 6Gbp/s can achieve.

Final verdict

If you’re looking for a cheap, but dependable, SSD for your PC or laptop, then the Adata SSD Ultimate SU800 is an excellent choice, with read and write speeds that are comparable to more expensive SSDs.

There’s plenty of choice when it comes to capacity, so if you want something bigger you can get more space for not much more money.

The Adata SSD Ultimate SU800 doesn’t do anything flashy, but sometimes all you need is an SSD that performs well, is reliable and is good value for money. The Adata SSD Ultimate SU800 does all three.



from TechRadar: Technology reviews http://ift.tt/2f8HZ2q

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