Performance Over Time and TRIM

When Plextor sent the drive in for review, they emphazised one thing: a technology they call "True Speed". Supposedly, its job is to guarantee a high performance experience throughout the lifetime of the drive, and even when the drive is at a dirty state. As this technology is firmware related, we don't know how it differs from what others (e.g. Intel and Crucial) have done.

First, lets get the base performance by running HD Tach on a clean drive:

In a clean state, we get 383MB/s read speeds and 329MB/s write speeds. Next we ran the drive through our torture test, which consists of 20 minutes of 4KB random writes (QD=32, 100% LBA space) run on a full drive:

The M3 is still able to manage an average write speed of ~163MB/s. However, the write speed drops to as low as 50MB/s for the first LBAs, while the peak performance is still easily over 300MB/s. Plextor does noticeably better than Crucial in this regard as the performance of the m4 dropped to an average of 35MB/s. However, it should also be noted that the M3 had a higher write speed to begin with.

I wasn't ready to let Plextor go this easily. To see how the "True Speed" technology really works, I secure erased the drive, filled it with sequential data and then tripled the amount of 4KB random writes to 60 minutes:

The amplitude of the graph is a lot smaller now and there are only two small peaks, compared to the previous graph with dozens of peaks. The performance drop is significant as we are looking at 50MB/s on average regardless of the LBA. At the lowest, the performance is 35-40MB/s. That's still better than the Crucial m4, however, even with three times the random data thrown at the M4.

Next I secure erased the drive, reran our 20 minute torture test and let the drive idle for 40 minutes:

It does recover pretty well and we are looking at almost as new performance. There are a few negative peaks where the write speed drops to ~130MB/s, but on average the performance is only 25MB/s short of clean performance.

Finally I formatted the drive to see how it responds to the ATA TRIM command:

And the performance is back to brand new.

These graphs show us that if you are running an operating system with TRIM support (e.g. Windows 7), then there is absolutely no problem with the Plextor M3. If you are running an OS with no official TRIM support for the SSD (e.g. Mac OS X), then a SandForce based SSD will still be a better choice in this regard. However, what I would like to note is that our torture test reflects an extreme usage case.

Even if you are an enthusiast or professional, it's unlikely that your usage model will put the drive in a similar state as our torture test. Our torture test is continuously writing 4KB random data across the drive; in the real world there is almost always some sequential data and idle time in between. As shown in the garbage collection graph, the M3 does not need hours of idle time to restore its performance, so it should maintain its performance pretty well even under an OS with no TRIM.

AnandTech Storage Bench 2011 - Light Workload Power Consumption
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  • ImSpartacus - Thursday, April 5, 2012 - link

    And you write pretty well considering your experience.
  • This Guy - Thursday, April 5, 2012 - link

    Agreed. You don't have a qurky style yet that screams out you wrote a piece, but this is a tech site so that's a good thing.

    You do a bloody good job, 18 or not. I haven't read many pieces by people as young that are at your level. You come off as a pro.
  • andylawcc - Thursday, April 5, 2012 - link

    what "ImSpartacus" and "This Guy" said, good job Kristian!
  • Sabresiberian - Saturday, April 7, 2012 - link

    I agree, Kristian is doing a very nice job.

    I say all the time maturity and age aren't necessarily related, and Kristian is one more example of what I'm talking about.

    The saddest thing about our society (in America and the rest of the "First World") is that the level of maturity has gone down, even though the actually average age in years has gone up. I quit a World of Warcraft guild a while back because of the lack of maturity - in the 30-something and older crowd, not the teenagers.

    ;)
  • Arbie - Friday, April 6, 2012 - link

    And in what we can assume is a second language... I'm very impressed. Good job.
  • Hourglasss - Thursday, April 5, 2012 - link

    I'm 17, How do I get your job?
  • JonnyDough - Friday, April 13, 2012 - link

    As if that matters. Let me know when you start thinking in terms of decades instead of months. :)
  • A5 - Thursday, April 5, 2012 - link

    Man I'm old.
  • ImSpartacus - Thursday, April 5, 2012 - link

    O_o

    Fuckin dream job for a minor, amirite?
  • earthrace57 - Sunday, April 8, 2012 - link

    Wow...I am 14 and I would kill for that job :P

    But in all seriousness, I would never have known that you were 18, you should go tell whoever taught you to write that they did a good job.

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