Sequential Read Performance

The sequential read test requests 128kB blocks and tests queue depths ranging from 1 to 32. The queue depth is doubled every three minutes, for a total test duration of 18 minutes. The test spans the entire drive, and the drive is filled before the test begins. The primary score we report is an average of performances at queue depths 1, 2 and 4, as client usage typically consists mostly of low queue depth operations.

Iometer - 128KB Sequential Read

The earlier MX series drives had somewhat poor sequential read speeds, though the spread from best to worst is quite small. The MX300 brings things up to average.

Iometer - 128KB Sequential Read (Power)

The MX300 is still quite efficient, but the SX930 and BX100 500GB both beat it by a wide margin.

With a higher starting point, the MX300's performance scaling is not as pronounced as the MX200's. The MX300 is a little bit slower at higher queue depths.

Sequential Write Performance

The sequential write test writes 128kB blocks and tests queue depths ranging from 1 to 32. The queue depth is doubled every three minutes, for a total test duration of 18 minutes. The test spans the entire drive, and the drive is filled before the test begins. The primary score we report is an average of performances at queue depths 1, 2 and 4, as client usage typically consists mostly of low queue depth operations.

Iometer - 128KB Sequential Write

Sequential write speeds on the MX300 are much slower than the MX200 or any other MLC drive, but it does manage to come out ahead of all the planar TLC drives.

Iometer - 128KB Sequential Write (Power)

Power efficiency is still great by planar TLC standards, but the Samsung 850 EVO managed to saturate the SATA connection while using the same amount of power.

The MX300 shows essentially no scaling with queue depth. For this test we usually don't see much scaling as caching large writes allows for full performance even at low queue depths, but full performance for the MX300 is still disappointing.

Random Performance Mixed Read/Write Performance
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  • Lonyo - Wednesday, June 15, 2016 - link

    Um, the conclusion is entirely negative. Read the conclusion? It's slow, but not as slow as planar TLC drives. It's inexpensive, but not super cheap. It's a generation "above" in naming of the MX200, but is slower. It has to compete on price because it can't compete on performance. It has an acute weakness in random reads.

    The main strengths are that it's fairly power efficient.
  • rtho782 - Tuesday, June 14, 2016 - link

    Meh, another SSD to compete on price. They have really become commodities!
  • cknobman - Tuesday, June 14, 2016 - link

    Not cheaper.
    Slower.
    Uses more power.
    No improvement on endurance.

    Am I missing anything major here?

    I just dont see anything that is purchase worthy here.
  • azazel1024 - Tuesday, June 14, 2016 - link

    If you need >512GB, but don't NEED 1TB and can't justify the price of a 1TB drive.

    I need to, sadly, buy a new SSD soon and I've been going back and forth between MLC and TLC. My issue is that my budget is extremely limited right now, but I also can't wait a whole lot longer.

    The 240/256GB TLC drives just seem to have shite for performance once their SLC caches are filled, and their random read performances are nothing to write home about either. They also tend to have small SLC caches, which increases the likelihood of hitting the cache limit and near full drive performance is especially bad on most of them and I have about 130GB of data I need to transfer off a 120 and a 60GB SSD to it to run one SSD boot drive. 480/512GB TLC drives at around $110-120 are a bit out of my price range (yes, my budget is THAT limited), but it would keep utilized capacity fairly low.

    240/256GB MLC drives on the other hand tend to have much better performance, especially as the drive fills up, except the MX200 :-(. Which means in the 240-256GB capacity range, an MX200 isn't much of an option for me. Right now I am looking at a PNY 2211 240GB drive as it seems to be a good blend of price and performance, especially performance once the drive is pretty highly utilized, and I have to face the fact that I might only have 130GB of data to move to the drive right now, but I am sure drive utilization will creep up to 150, 160, 170, 180GB given a year or two (I have a 5.4GiB RAID0 array for bulk storage of 2x3TB drives, but applications aren't getting smaller, even if I stay good on keeping only a few games loaded on the SSD at a time).

    Sadly MLC 480/512GB are just well outside my price range right now.

    What would be nice is seeing m.2 PCI-e based drives that aren't such a huge jump in $ per GB.
  • DanNeely - Tuesday, June 14, 2016 - link

    While TLC drives do slow down a lot once the SLC cache is exhausted, unless you're doing video editing, batch processing of media files, etc sustained multi-gigabyte writes tend to be very uncommon in the consumer market. SLC caches are used because they're large enough to handle normal use. You really need to be pushing a lot of data at once to exhaust them.
  • jabber - Tuesday, June 14, 2016 - link

    I've tried cloning a existing build to the TLC type SSDs (I often will build a machine using a old 64GB SSD then clone it over when the new larger SSD arrives) and the write speeds can drop below 40MBps after about 2 minutes of cloning. We are talking about mainstream SSDs with USB2.0 levels of performance. Even a 5400 RPM HDD will do better.
  • Billy Tallis - Tuesday, June 14, 2016 - link

    Our sequential write test runs for three minutes at each queue depth. The slowest 3-minute average we've recorded at any queue depth was 61MB/s. For your drive cloning to be running at only 40MB/s after a mere two minutes, there has to be some other bottleneck. Your software is probably preventing the copy from proceeding at full speed, such as by alternating reading from the source drive and writing to the destination.
  • jabber - Tuesday, June 14, 2016 - link

    I said about 2 minutes. I don't actually have an exact record as I wasn't writing an article or review but let's say very soon after starting the cloning the performance dropped to a 'unacceptable' level. Anything below 200MBps write in a 2016 SSD should be classed as unacceptable. By the way it was a BX200 SSD.
  • vladx - Tuesday, June 14, 2016 - link

    Yes, most TLC drives are enough for consumer drives. In fact, I'd bet my 840 EVO still kicks this MX300's ass.
  • Byte - Tuesday, June 14, 2016 - link

    Truth be told I bet the 830 might still beat it. I put my 830 in my new 4.5GHz skylake system and it was still blazing fast. Put in a m.2 950pro and can't really even tell a difference. Now the low end stuff like Sandisk SSD Plus, you can actually tell its slower at everything.

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