Overclock.net - Overclocking.net
     
 
Home Gallery Reviews Blogs Register Today's Posts Mark Forums Read Members List


Go Back   Overclock.net - Overclocking.net > Industry News > Hardware News

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools
Old 10-26-09   #1 (permalink)
4.0 GHz
 
Gr3m1in's Avatar
 
amd ati

Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Sydney
Posts: 580

Rep: 63 Gr3m1in is acknowledged by some
Unique Rep: 53
Trader Rating: 0
Default [Legit Reviews] Kingston 40GB V Series Boot Drive SSD

http://www.legitreviews.com/article/1111/1/

Quote:
Kingston's 34nm 40GB Boot Drive

Kingston has been offering Solid-State Drives (SSDs) to consumers since they introduced their SSDNow family of drives back at the 2009 Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. The first two products in its SSDNow line of SSDs were the SSDNow E Series and SSDNow M Series. Kingston targeted its SSDNow E Series to the enterprise server environment while the SSDNow M Series was built for the road warrior who demanded the ultimate performance from a notebook PC. The Kingston SSDNow E and M Series use Intel’s first generation 50nm solid-state drive technology, which was the best on the market back in January 2009. We published an in-depth review of the Kingston 80GB SSDNow M Series drive and found it to be on the same performance level as the Intel X25-M 80GB SSD that we previously reviewed. The SSDNow M and E series drives were fast, but more expensive than what mainstream consumers were willing to pay.
Kingston next went for the mainstream market and launched the SSDNow V Series SSDs with what they called upgrade bundles during Computex Taipei in June of 2009. The SSDNow V series was targeted specifically for mass-market consumers and small and medium businesses. The Kingston SSDNow V Series also featured upgrade bundles for either notebooks or desktop users. These low-cost, value-driven SSD solutions were designed to increase performance on existing desktops and notebooks while giving consumers an easy way to backup their data and to install the drives in their systems. The SSDNow V series had two limitations, though. They only were available in 128GB and 64GB capacities and they also featured the JMicron JMF602 controller that isn't the best performing controller on the market by any means and was known to stutter when multi-tasking. Kingston worked with JMicron and Toshiba to develop a firmware work-around that removed the stutter issue at the cost of some performance. When we reviewed the Kingston SSDNow V Series 128GB drive in July of 2009 we found the drive to be a great value, but the random write performance was a little lacking. With an inexpensive controller and no cache on the SSD, this was to be expected, but it was still a solid and inexpensive SSD that was great for most consumers to get their feet wet with a product they more than likely never owned before.

Just two short months later in August of 2009, Kingston released an SSD known as the SSDNow V+, which features capacities of up to 256GB and higher input and output operations per second (IOPS) thanks to a Samsung controller, 128MB cache, and Samsung MLC NAND components. This drive was priced and targeted at prosumers and enterprise companies looking to increase performance and extend the life of existing systems. This drive fits right in the middle of the Kingston SSD line-up and made the Kingston SSDNow series complete from the top to the bottom. Our review of the Kingston 256GB SSDNow V+ series SSD showed that it was nearly twice as fast as the SSDNow V series and a model was available with a massive 256GB capacity, which is more than any other Kingston SSDNow series drive.

  • Kingston SSDNow E Series
    - (Intel Controller, 50nm Intel SLC NAND, 16MB Cache)
  • Kingston SSDNow M Series
    - (Intel Controller, 50nm Intel MLC NAND, 16MB Cache)
  • Kingston SSDNow V+ Series
    - (Samsung Controller, Samsung MLC NAND, 128MB Cache)
  • Kingston SSDNow V Series
    - (JMicron Controller, Toshiba MLC NAND, No Cache)
This product stack is fairly simple to understand and each series within the SSDNow family differs by their internals, so you know what you are buying. This fairly simple product stack starts to get a little confusing as Kingston announced this morning a new 40GB 'boot' drive in the SSDNow V series that features the second generation Intel controller with 34nm MLC NAND! As many of you might be aware this is the latest and greatest SSD from Intel and is considered by us and many other reviewers as being the best SSD on the market today. In fact, the Intel 34nm G2 SSD series is the only SSD that has ever earned the Legit Reviews Editor's Choice award out of the nearly two dozen drives that we have tried out over the past couple of years.
Kingston today announced the release of the SSDNow V Series 40GB Boot Drive, the latest addition to its V (Value) family of solid-state drives (SSD). The Kingston SSDNow V Series 40GB Boot Drive is said to be one of the best and most cost-effective ways to accelerate any desktop’s boot, shutdown and application load times. The best price of the drive is that it is available for as low as $84.99 after rebates (U.S. only) at e-tailer Newegg.com when it begins shipping on November 9, 2009.

Kingston SSDNow 40GB Boot Drive Features and Specifications:

  • Sequential Speed: up to 170MB/sec. read and up to 40MB/sec. write
  • Performance: enhances productivity; makes users more efficient
  • Innovative: 2.5" form factor; uses NAND Flash memory components
  • Silent: runs silent and cool with no moving parts
  • Reliable: less likely to fail than a standard hard drive
  • Shock Resistant: no moving parts; handles rougher conditions than a hard drive
  • Supports S.M.A.R.T.: Self-Monitoring, Analysis and Reporting Technology
  • Guaranteed: three-year Kingston warranty, 24/7 tech support
  • Capacity1: 40GB
  • Storage temperatures: -40° C to 85° C
  • Operating temperatures: 0° C to 70° C
  • Vibration operating: 2.17G (7-800Hz)
  • Vibration non-operating: 20G (20-2000Hz)
  • Power specs: Active: 0.15W (TYP); Sleep: 0.06W
  • Life expectancy: 1 million hours MTBF
The SSDNow V Series 40GB Boot Drive comes rated with impressive sequential read speeds of up to 170MB/sec. and mediocre write speeds of up to 40MB/sec. This drive should not be mixed up with the original Kingston SSDNow V series and it should really be called the SSDNow M+ Series, but hey, LR doesn't get to make the names up. The drive has all new internals and is a much better and improved drive, but let's take it apart and test it before we jump to conclusions!

Awesome price but still too small to justify buying sadly for the majority of us

System: Baby Dragon
CPU
AMD Phenom II X2 550 BE @ 3.6
Motherboard
Gigabyte GA-MA790X-UD4P
Memory
G Skill F2-8500CL5D-4GBPK
Graphics Card
Sapphire HD 4830 512MB 750mhz/1050mhz 24/7
Hard Drive
WD 6400AAKS(os) WD 6400AACS (storage)
Power Supply
Coolermaster 460w RS-460-PCAR-A2
Case
Coolermaster RC 690
CPU cooling
Xigmatek HDT-S1283 Red Scorpion
GPU cooling
Non Reference Sapphire Heatsink
OS
tri boot, XP Pro SP3 x32,Vista & 7 Ultimate x64
Monitor
2x 19" @ 2560x1024 @85hz
Gr3m1in is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-26-09   #2 (permalink)
Overclocker
 
Paradigm Shifter's Avatar
 
intel ati

Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: England
Posts: 740

Rep: 88 Paradigm Shifter is acknowledged by some
Unique Rep: 69
Trader Rating: 0
Default

40GB? Hm... a pair of these in RAID0 would make quite a nice boot drive. Wonder what the prices'll be like in the UK?
__________________

System: Aoi
CPU
Core i7 920 D0
Motherboard
Gigabyte EX58-UD5
Memory
6GB Corsair
Graphics Card
XFX 4870X2
Hard Drive
Samsung Spinpoint F1 1TB (x4)
Sound Card
...integrated...
Power Supply
Corsair HX620w
Case
Antec P180
CPU cooling
Thermalright Ultra Extreme 120
GPU cooling
Stock
OS
Windows 7 RC 7100
Monitor
Dell 2405FPW
Paradigm Shifter is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-26-09   #3 (permalink)
4387 point(s) total
 
DuckieHo's Avatar
 
intel nvidia

Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: NJ
Posts: 36,705

Folding Team Rank: 1525
Trader Rating: 63
Default

I'm more curious about the Kingston SSDNow V Series (JMicron Controller, Toshiba MLC NAND, No Cache). Supposedly, they fixed the stuttering at the cost of bandwidth... I would like to see a review of that.
__________________
FOR SALE: AMD Athlon 64 LE-1620, Silverstone FP53 3.5" Bay Adapter


To answer most of your questions: (1) a fridge cannot cool a PC (2) 64-bit OS for over 3.4GB (3) If a PCIe card fits, it should work (4) Resolution, not screen size (5) If you have a question, it is not news (6) Report, not respond to Spam (7) Single-Rail/Non-Modular PSUs are not always better than Multi-Rail/Modular


System: Three Dead Mobos in a Year
CPU
Q6600 (3.4GHz)
Motherboard
EVGA 780i
Memory
2x2GB OCZ Reaper 1096MHz
Graphics Card
GTX260 55nm
Hard Drive
PERC 6/i: 3xRAID0 X25-V, 3xRAID0 7200.12
Sound Card
X-Fi XtremeMusic
Power Supply
Corsair 620HX
Case
Li Lian PC-V2100 [10x120mm fans]
CPU cooling
FuZion V2 + Quad-Heatercore
GPU cooling
EK Block + DDC-3.2
OS
Vista Ultimate 64
Monitor
Samsung 226BW "C" + Sceptre 19"
DuckieHo is offline I fold for Overclock.net Overclocked Account DuckieHo's Gallery   Reply With Quote
Old 10-27-09   #4 (permalink)
New to Overclock.net
 
awdrifter's Avatar
 
intel ati

Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 2,547

Rep: 145 awdrifter is acknowledged by manyawdrifter is acknowledged by many
Unique Rep: 119
Trader Rating: 0
Default

40MB/s write is too slow, double that and they'd have a winner.
__________________
99.99% of the world listens to everything else. If you are part of the 0.01% who listen to Eurobeat, copy and paste this into your sig.
This is the Secret Signature Organization (SSO) add me to your sig to help me take over the world

System: Twin Turbo S2000
CPU
Q6600 (@3.4ghz, lapped)
Motherboard
ASRock P45TurboTwins2000
Memory
Patriot PC2-6400 2x2GB
Graphics Card
HD4850 (@800gpu/1087mem)
Hard Drive
WD6400AALS/WD6400AAKS
Sound Card
Diamond XS71DDL
Power Supply
Antec Basiq 500w + Ultra Xconnect 500w
Case
Cooler Master Mystique 632S
CPU cooling
Thermaltake Sonic Tower (lapped, dual 120mm fans)
GPU cooling
Zerotherm GX810
OS
Win7 Ultimate x86/XP Pro(Dual Boot)
Monitor
MAG 22" WS LCD
awdrifter is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools



All times are GMT -5. The time now is 09:11 AM.


Overclock.net is a Carbon Neutral Site Creative Commons License

Terms of Service / Forum Rules | Privacy Policy | DMCA Info | Advertising | Become an Official Vendor
Copyright © 2009 Shogun Interactive Development. Most rights reserved.
Page generated in 0.13530 seconds with 8 queries