Power Consumption

We reported drive only power consumption in three scenarios: idle, during sequential writes and during high queue depth 4KB random writes. At idle the V+100 does incredibly well, but under load it is one of the most power hungry SSDs we've tested. As bad as that sounds we're still talking about half of the power usage of a 600GB VelociRaptor, but in a notebook don't expect to save any power under load - only at idle.

A big contributing factor to the high power usage is the controller's aggressive garbage collection. To be fair however, even the SandForce drives require similar power levels if faced with incompressible data.

Idle Power - Idle at Desktop

Load Power - 128KB Sequential Write

Load Power - 4KB Random Write, QD=32

AnandTech Storage Bench Final Words
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  • Ezekeel - Thursday, December 9, 2010 - link

    That is all you have to do to enable TRIM, yes.

    However, I was talking about optimizations for an SSD (https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/SSD#Tips_for_... http://cptl.org/wp/index.php/2010/03/30/tuning-sol... which you all have to do manually while Windows7 afaik does at least some optimizations automatically if you install it on an SSD, like disabling (Super)PreFetch and indexing. Also partition setup with diskpart under Windows automatically takes care of a proper partition alignment while you still have to do it manually under Linux (http://randomtechoutburst.blogspot.com/2010/03/4k-...
  • ClagMaster - Monday, November 15, 2010 - link

    You are right Mr Shimpi that this is confusing and I got a headache.

    I am not certain what I am going to get if I order a Kingston Drive. Performance is so diverse and the model nomenclature so similar.

    I am going to get a OCZVertex 2 or an Intel X-25 G2 instead. I know what I am getting with these brands.
  • psyside1 - Sunday, November 21, 2010 - link


    Hi Anand and all who read this.

    Let me start of by saying that i'm new to SSD tech (noob) and i'm starting to learning but there are some things which where not pointed in the reviews as far as i remember.

    Heck, even in this review you said that Inferno is somewhat capped to 50 mb/s if i'm not wrong?

    So in short,

    Where i live i'm limited to 2 models, one is Patriot Inferno and the Other A-DATA S599 with possibly 50K IOPS firmware, as Newegg and Amazon specs confirm?

    Now, does that firmware insure i won't get slowdowns (at some points) like the Inferno model in this review? or there is some more about it. if there is, i really got no idea how is that possible same controller, same build? and heck in most of the test the Vertex 2 is still fastest, even faster then the other drives which now share the 50K IOPS firmware, G.Skill Phoenix pro, Corsair Force etc??

    i'm mostly interested in SSD which will have good read/write speeds (4K etc) and to be fast during programs/games installation. I got 6 pcs connected in network so that means alot to me, in short does my needs require higher IOPS firmware or i would not notice any difference in performance during installation of big size programs/games.

    Also, is it possible to know what revision you get without actually buying the product? is there any info on the package/sticker or part number? the difference in performance i noticed in some reviews was 2x higher random write (4K) speed on the models with OCZ "exclusive firmware. And as far that point goes i'm totally clueless does it really matter at all, and if its not how that that translate in real world usage?

    Please answer i don't want to regret my purchase :(

    Thanks and sorry for slight off topic :)
  • psyside1 - Sunday, November 21, 2010 - link


    Sorry for double post there is no edit option, actually Madman007 was asking the same i did on the more appropriate way, my English is bad.
  • tno - Sunday, May 1, 2011 - link

    "Remember that NAND is written to at the page level (4KB), but erased at the block level (512 pages)." I think you meant '512 KB.'
  • Gaucherre - Friday, May 6, 2011 - link

    Instead of $259, the Kingston V100+ 96GB is available for $119.99 after rebate from Buy.com. This pricing completely changes the value rating from acceptable to outstanding value! The mail-in rebate is rotating from one online store to another. Last month it was at Newegg.com; right now it's at Buy.com. Next month - who knows? Anyway, the cost per Gigabyte when tested here at Anandtech.com was around $2.70. Now it's $1.25 per Gigabyte, and a 96GB drive is large enough for Windows plus quite a few installed programs and games. Pretty good value. Think I just talked myself into ordering one .......

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