Conclusion

Samsung's update to their TLC SATA SSD is not quite as impressive as the improvements the MLC-based 860 PRO showed, but the Samsung 860 EVO's gains are still enough to put Samsung back on top in that product segment. The competition had caught up to the 850 EVO and surpassed it in several cases in recent months, but Samsung can still deliver a top-notch SSD.

The 860 EVO's performance did not improve in every metric, but on most of them it is slightly faster than the 850 EVO and it is usually as fast as any other TLC SATA SSD. The small handful of regressions should not have much effect on normal use and are not particularly severe even on synthetic benchmarks.

The Samsung 860 EVO's power consumption never goes much above 2W, regardless of the workload. At idle, it uses less power than any other drive in its class. However, total energy usage on our ATSB tests is still trailing behind some of the competitors, so the 860 EVO isn't the unqualified best choice for maximizing battery life.

Overall, the performance and power consumption of the Samsung 860 EVO make it a worthy successor to the 850 EVO. It does not offer any compelling reason for current users of an 850 EVO or similar SSD to upgrade, but the improvements are measurable, if otherwise usually imperceptible. For new systems, the 860 EVO is a reasonable offering for today's market, provided the price is right.

SATA SSD Price Comparison
  240-275GB 480-525GB 960-1050GB 2TB
Samsung 860 EVO $94.99
(38¢/GB)
$169.99
(34¢/GB)
$299.99
(30¢/GB)
$649.99
(32¢/GB)
Crucial MX500 $79.99
(32¢/GB)
$134.95
(27¢/GB)
$259.99
(26¢/GB)
$499.99
(25¢/GB)
Crucial MX300 $89.99
(33¢/GB)
$147.45
(28¢/GB)
$269.99
(26¢/GB)
$528.70
(26¢/GB)
Samsung 850 EVO $87.99
(35¢/GB)
$149.99
(30¢/GB)
$349.20
(35¢/GB)
$697.95
(35¢/GB)
SanDisk Ultra 3D $79.99
(32¢/GB)
$129.99
(26¢/GB)
$270.50
(27¢/GB)
$499.99
(25¢/GB)
WD Blue 3D NAND SATA $79.99
(32¢/GB)
$134.99
(27¢/GB)
$259.99
(26¢/GB)
$499.99
(25¢/GB)
M.2 $90.41
(36¢/GB)
$139.99
(28¢/GB)
$289.99
(29¢/GB)
$599.99
(30¢/GB)
Samsung 860 PRO $139.99
(55¢/GB)
$249.99
(49¢/GB)
$479.99
(47¢/GB)
$949.99
(46¢/GB)
Intel 545s $89.99
(35¢/GB)
$149.99
(29¢/GB)
   
Crucial BX300 $87.99
(37¢/GB)
$144.99
(30¢/GB)
   

Looking specifically at 2TB M.2 SATA alternatives to the drive in this review, we find the WD Blue 3D NAND is $50 cheaper, and the 860 EVO is definitely not worth $50 more. Broadening the price comparison to include 2.5" models, the competition is much stronger. The 860 EVO is still selling at MSRP, and those prices are not competitive. The 2TB Crucial MX500 for $500 makes a lot more sense than the 2TB 860 EVO for $650.

Across the full range of capacities, Samsung is trying to continue charging a premium that their product no longer justified, because the alternatives are just as good. 30¢/GB should be about the upper limit of pricing on the 860 EVO, instead of being the lower limit.

As 64L 3D TLC finds its way out to other brands and as the other NAND manufacturers start supplying their 512Gb 64L TLC parts in volume, the competition will only increase. Samsung's reputation can guarantee the 860 EVO a lot of sales, but there are better deals out there.

Power Management
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  • yifu - Wednesday, February 21, 2018 - link

    Super small External storage usb 10gb . Or Add Internal 2nd storage for laptop . Like the xiaomi mibook pro
  • yifu - Wednesday, February 21, 2018 - link

    SATA SSDs at this moment is about price! If you do not have amazing power consumption, or features like PLP and end to end data protection. There isn’t much to make me pay . SATA SSDs will become storage disk , os boot drive will be PCIe from now on.

    Price and Power consumption aee important for older laptops upgrades. Price and features are important for people who are looking for SATA SSDs for data storages.

    Speed is not important any more.but , I only look for high seq write speed that last long enough.

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