ATTO

ATTO's Disk Benchmark is a quick and easy freeware tool to measure drive performance across various transfer sizes.

ATTO Performance

The ATTO plot for the 4TB 850 EVO shows no problems and very slightly better read speeds than the 2TB 850 EVO.

AS-SSD

AS-SSD is another quick and free benchmark tool. It uses incompressible data for all of its tests, making it an easy way to keep an eye on which drives are relying on transparent data compression. The short duration of the test makes it a decent indicator of peak drive performance.

Incompressible Sequential Read PerformanceIncompressible Sequential Write Performance

As expected, the AS-SSD results are unremarkable. Even if the new V-NAND were slower, the 4TB drive has more than enough parallelism to provide peak performance that saturates the SATA link.

Idle Power Consumption

Since the ATSB tests based on real-world usage cut idle times short to 25ms, their power consumption scores paint an inaccurate picture of the relative suitability of drives for mobile use. During real-world client use, a solid state drive will spend far more time idle than actively processing commands. Our testbed doesn't support the deepest DevSlp power saving mode that SATA drives can implement, but we can measure the power usage in the intermediate slumber state where both the host and device ends of the SATA link enter a low-power state and the drive is free to engage its internal power savings measures.

We also report the drive's idle power consumption while the SATA link is active and not in any power saving state. Drives are required to be able to wake from the slumber state in under 10 milliseconds, but that still leaves plenty of room for them to add latency to a burst of I/O. Because of this, many desktops default to either not using SATA Aggressive Link Power Management (ALPM) at all or to only enable it partially without making use of the device-initiated power management (DIPM) capability. Additionally, SATA Hot-Swap is incompatible with the use of DIPM, so our SSD testbed usually has DIPM turned off during performance testing.

Idle Power Consumption (HIPM+DIPM)
Active Idle Power Consumption (No ALPM)

The 4TB EVO has slightly lower idle power consumption than the 2TB EVO, but both still draw twice as much power in the slumber state as the smaller 850 EVOs with the MEX and MGX controllers.

Mixed Read/Write Performance Final Words
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  • no_nonsense4857 - Wednesday, July 13, 2016 - link

    Was always interested in a higher capacity M.2 drive for my XPS13. 850 Evo maxed out at 512GB where as the Sandisk X400 was the only reliable one at 1TB.

    Amazon has just listed a 850 Evo 1TB M.2 @ 350 USD - So eagerly waiting for an update from Anand in this regards :)

    https://www.amazon.com/Samsung-850-EVO-Internal-MZ...
  • zodiacfml - Thursday, July 14, 2016 - link

    Though SATA interface is limiting the performance of such drives, isnt Random performance has more room to grow?
  • hMunster - Saturday, July 16, 2016 - link

    The write endurance is really shit at only 75 writes. How large are the pages, and how much is typical write amplification, or is that already factored in?
  • NomadXL - Wednesday, July 27, 2016 - link

    So this new 850 EVO 4TB has a 300 Endurance.. and the previous one of 2TB aswell?

    I thought the 2TB model had only a 150TB endurance rating..

    Please can somebody confirm this?
  • centaur1 - Thursday, July 28, 2016 - link

    Any idea of external cases that this will work with? Thunderbolt?

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