Final Words

The Crucial BX200 comes in last place as often as not. The Crucial BX300 doesn't entirely reverse that, but it still provides one of the biggest generational jumps the SSD market has seen. Micron has learned from their mistakes with the BX200 and produced a worthy successor to the BX100. With the MX300 doing so well as a mainstream SSD with entry-level pricing, the focus of the BX line has shifted from simply being the cheaper option to being the drive designed specifically for the smaller capacities demanded by cost-conscious consumers.

Micron's large 384Gb 3D TLC die is ill-suited to making small SSDs, as 120-128GB SSDs end up only having 3 NAND chips on a four-channel controller, and even at larger capacities the flash is not well balanced across the controller channels. For the next generation of 3D NAND, Micron is addressing this issue by manufacturing both a large 512Gb die and a smaller 256Gb die. Since that 64-layer 3D NAND is still ramping up to full production, Micron has chosen for the BX300 to use their 256Gb 3D MLC that allows for a small SSD to be reasonably fast and free of the downsides of the TLC NAND that dominates the entry-level SSD market.

It's a bit of a puzzle how Micron can afford to sell an MLC SSD for less than their TLC SSD without making serious compromises elsewhere like using a DRAMless controller. But as long as they're willing to sell the BX300 at these prices, it's a great product.

The BX300 only has a few notable weaknesses. Micron's 32L 3D NAND is unusually power-hungry during sequential reads, despite being otherwise quite efficient. This also affects random reads to some extent. The BX300's peak performance is on average slightly below top-tier SATA drives like Samsung's 850 PRO and EVO and the Intel 545s, and it is outperformed by other 3D TLC drives like the MX300 and ADATA SU800 when they're able to make good use of their SLC caches. But this is offset by how well the BX300 retains its performance under heavier workloads and when operating with a nearly-full drive. In that respect, it has a significant advantage over the Crucial MX300.

  120-128GB 240-275GB 480-525GB 960-1050GB 2TB
Crucial BX300 $59.99 (50¢/GB) $89.99 (38¢/GB) $149.99 (31¢/GB)    
Crucial MX300   $99.99 (40¢/GB) $159.99 (32¢/GB) $289.99 (29¢/GB) $549.00 (27¢/GB)
ADATA SU800 $56.68 (44¢/GB) $91.99 (36¢/GB) $168.58 (33¢/GB) $265.00 (26¢/GB)  
ADATA SU900   $108.99 (43¢/GB) $197.80 (39¢/GB)    
ADATA XPG SX950   $109.99 (46¢/GB) $214.99 (45¢/GB)    
Intel SSD 545s   $99.99 (39¢/GB) $169.99 (33¢/GB)    
Samsung 850 PRO   $114.99 (45¢/GB) $212.19 (41¢/GB) $420.99 (41¢/GB) $897.99 (44¢/GB)
Samsung 850 EVO   $89.99 (36¢/GB) $174.75 (35¢/GB) $299.99 (30¢/GB) $715.00 (36¢/GB)

The Samsung 850 EVO is available with very competitive pricing at the moment, shutting many drives using Micron 32L 3D NAND out of the market. The MSRP of the 480GB BX300 we tested is low enough to beat basically everything on a price per GB basis, and is far enough below the Samsung 850 EVO that it isn't an automatic decision to get the Samsung instead. The 240GB BX300 will debut with the same price as the 250GB Samsung 850 EVO, making the Samsung the better option for now.

The smallest capacity of the Crucial BX300 may prove to be the most popular and most competitive. There are other 120GB drives on the market that are priced a bit lower, but the BX300 has the advantage that it uses 3D MLC NAND, doesn't use a DRAMless controller and uses all four NAND channels on its controller. The 120GB BX300 will be slower than the 480GB model we tested, but it will retain the general characteristic of performing almost as well when it is full as when empty. This is far more important at such small capacities. The 120GB BX300 also benefits from lack of competition from Samsung: the planar TLC-based 750 EVO is not available at competitive prices and the 120GB 850 EVO and 128GB 850 PRO were discontinued when Samsung moved from 32L 3D NAND to 48L 3D NAND.

Power Management
Comments Locked

90 Comments

View All Comments

  • Samus - Sunday, September 3, 2017 - link

    It's true, especially on sale, the 850 EVO is an incredible value for performance focused SATA shoppers. But if you are ok with 80-90% of the real world performance of an 850 EVO, you can get that from pretty much any modern SSD for much less. Various Sandisk drives (like the Ultra II) and even Mushkin drives are good performance, still use MLC, and are cheaper.
  • m16 - Tuesday, August 29, 2017 - link

    It might have a "horrible" wake up time, but that is still really fast and will probably not be an issue on anything at all.

    The drive seems like a steal, and the only thing that it is missing is temperature throttling available in the higher end MX series. Which is also not an issue except in higher end laptops that produce a lot of heat or really small desktops with a beast of a CPU/GPU setup and not enough ventilation.
  • MrCommunistGen - Tuesday, August 29, 2017 - link

    I realize they're targeting the BX300 at the lower end and for lower price points, but I'd have really loved to have seen a 960GB model.

    Also, I'm really loving that the full-drive performance is close to the empty performance, unlike so many other recent drives on 1xnm TLC, Micron 3D TLC, and/or are DRAM-less.
  • damianrobertjones - Wednesday, August 30, 2017 - link

    There's a 1tb model?
  • Wubinator - Wednesday, August 30, 2017 - link

    No there isn't

    http://www.crucial.com/usa/en/ssd/series--BX300?cm...
  • MrCommunistGen - Friday, September 8, 2017 - link

    I was trying to say that I wish Crucial had decided to make a 960GB model... but they didn't. Performance, Performance/Watt, $/GB are all great. I want a bigger drive with all those attributes.
  • creed3020 - Tuesday, August 29, 2017 - link

    Great review Billy! Consistent execution on the writing and the newer format graphs are a nice refresh for the SSD review format. Keep these coming.

    I still wish the MX100 was in the charts to get a better grasp on the generational changes.
  • jabber - Tuesday, August 29, 2017 - link

    99% of Hardware review sites always make this mistake. They always ignore the hardware that most people will have i.e. the hardware from the past 2-3 years. They just always test against the stuff they had sent them 6 months previous that most still haven't bothered to upgrade to. Most of the benches have little relevance to most users wanting to know how the new stuff compares to theirs. It's really frustrating.
  • ComputerGuy2006 - Tuesday, August 29, 2017 - link

    I agree, I have the Bx100 and I would be interesting in a direct comparison. Even the "ssd 2015 bench" does not have the bx300 right now so I can't compare them.
  • Samus - Sunday, September 3, 2017 - link

    Lucky, the BX100 was an amazing value back in the day (hah, 2 years ago) and still holds up.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now