Conclusion

The hardware in the Team Group's MP34 SSD is nothing new; plenty of other brands have been selling basically the same drive for months. What's interesting about the MP34 is the newer firmware it uses for the Phison E12 controller. Some other brands have been slower to start shipping Phison's firmware updates, and many fail to offer the updates for drives that have already been sold. This is a shame, because the Team MP34 shows that Phison has continued to refine their firmware, bringing modest performance improvements with no significant sacrifices. Phison tends to offer more post-launch firmware updates than most other controller vendors. For their first generation NVMe controller, this was a necessity to remedy obvious shortcomings, but for the Phison E12 controller this continuing support is just icing on the cake.

There are only a handful of cases where the we see other drives achieving better performance out of the same Toshiba/SanDisk 3D TLC, though we expect we'd see a few more if we had the chance to test the 500GB WD Black SN750. Overall, Phison is doing a good job of handling the NAND they're working with, and the cases where their drives fall behind seem to be more often due to shortcomings with the NAND itself than with Phison's controller or firmware. Phison provides firmware to use their recent controllers with Micron NAND instead of Toshiba/SanDisk, but for this generation almost nobody is using that option. This is likely to change with their next generation of controllers, and there will probably be much more diversity among Phison E16 drives than among Phison E12 drives.

The Phison E12 is now well-established as a solid platform that can handle heavy workloads with no trouble. It doesn't set benchmark records, but it provides great performance even under adverse conditions. And for mobile users, it has employs solid power management techniques and doesn't burn a lot of power trying to be the absolute fastest.

High-End NVMe SSD Price Comparison
(May 15, 2019)
  240-280GB 480-512GB 960GB-1TB 2TB
Team Group MP34 $41.99 (16¢/GB) $74.99 (15¢/GB) $159.99 (16¢/GB)  
GIGABYTE Aorus RGB M.2 $79.99 (31¢/GB) $119.99 (23¢/GB)    
MyDigitalSSD
BPX Pro
$44.99 (19¢/GB) $79.99 (17¢/GB)   $329.99 (17¢/GB)
Corsair Force MP510 $49.99 (21¢/GB) $74.99 (16¢/GB) $134.99 (14¢/GB) $319.99 (17¢/GB)
Silicon Power P34A80 $43.99 (17¢/GB) $64.99 (13¢/GB) $129.99 (13¢/GB) $329.00 (16¢/GB)
ADATA XPG
SX8200 Pro
$54.99 (21¢/GB) $76.99 (15¢/GB) $157.99 (15¢/GB)  
HP EX950   $87.99 (17¢/GB) $159.99 (16¢/GB) $319.99 (16¢/GB)
Samsung
970 EVO Plus
$67.99 (27¢/GB) $125.64 (25¢/GB) $247.88 (25¢/GB)  
Western Digital
WD Black SN750
$68.99 (28¢/GB) $107.99 (22¢/GB) $222.99 (22¢/GB)  

For now, Phison E12 drives are largely interchangeable, with a few exceptions like the Gigabyte Aorus RGB. The Team MP34 only stands out by having a shorter three-year warranty period compared to the standard five years for this product segment. Given that shorter warranty, it needs to be a bit cheaper than the competition. At the moment, it's not really accomplishing that: the 256GB model is $2 less than the Silicon Power P34A80 that is basically the same drive with a 5-year warranty, and at higher capacities the Silicon Power drive is substantially cheaper. Which may sound like splitting hairs, but that's the challenge inherent in a commodity market like SSDs.

Phison E12 drives in general are the cheapest current-generation high-end NVMe drives on the market, which is appropriate given that they are a bit slower overall than the Silicon Motion based competitors or the top drives from Samsung and WD. Since the Phison E12 drives are still plenty fast for almost every use case and their performance is more well-rounded than the Silicon Motion SM2262EN drives, Phison drives are currently the best deals in this market segment, but the Team MP34 isn't quite the top pick from that crowd.

Flash memory prices are still in decline, but they aren't in free-fall like last year and are starting to stabilize. The transition from 64-layer 3D TLC to 9x-layer 3D TLC has slowed to a crawl, and we aren't expecting any new controllers to shake up the market in the near future. For the next few months, we expect this market segment to be relatively unchanged. A few more Phison E12 and SM2262EN drives are on the way and prices will go down a bit further, but overall things are going to be much calmer than last year.

 
Power Management
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  • ssd-user - Sunday, May 19, 2019 - link

    I see that you are still in denial about how it was you who couldn't read diagrams. I'd also like to point out that I'm actually trying to be the change I want to see exactly by asking for the sorting to be fixed.

    Because the sorting clearly is wrong. I pointed out a very stark example of when a much worse drive sorts above the better ones.

    Also, your lack of reading comprehension is showing in how you think this is only about TRIM. As I said, this is about disk full situations. And even with TRIM, the disk may simply be close to full. Not everybody buys an SSD that is twice as big as it needs to be.

    I was also pointing out that even if your drive isn't full, it may well show the full behavior in reality.

    Sorry for not being your ideal party buddy.
  • peevee - Monday, May 20, 2019 - link

    Who uses their SSDs full to the brim and in sustained write mode? Honestly, that scenario is not even realistic for properly managed DB servers, let alone in client systems where the only wait time which actually happens is during system boot/application launch/data load on up to 80% full (in Anandtech-speak "empty" system).
    Client writes are all cached first and the write itself happens in background, the user does not have to wait anything.

    AT does not even test this scenario properly, even their "Light" test is WAY too write-heavy for that.

    A synthetic which would reflect that is something like "64kb random read" (runs are 16 clusters=64k on NTFS, and most DLLs are close to that size).
  • MDD1963 - Wednesday, May 15, 2019 - link

    660P from Intel is $109 for 1 TB....; even though it is 'only' 2x PCI-e lanes capable, it is still more than 'snappy' for that sort of cost/capacity ratio....
  • peevee - Monday, May 20, 2019 - link

    Why do they even use x4 PCIe when they cannot even saturate x2? Really, peak read of 1.4GB/s is pathetic.
  • DyneCorp - Monday, June 17, 2019 - link

    "The write endurance ratings are still competitive with high-end drives that offer five year warranties"

    The MP34 has over twice the endurance of any SSD utilizing the SM2262 with Micron NAND. I apologize, but I'm not understanding what you mean by "still competitive". Seems as if Phison is outclassing the competition in certain regards. A small sacrifice in performance for exceptionally more endurance.
  • DyneCorp - Monday, June 17, 2019 - link

    Metrics*, not regards ha.
  • crimson117 - Friday, April 24, 2020 - link

    Looks like the new MP34's offer a 5-year warranty:

    256GB - TM8FP4256G0C101
    512GB - TM8FP4512G0C101
    1TB - TM8FP4001T0C101

    https://www.teamgroupinc.com/en/product/mp34

    https://www.teamgroupinc.com/en/catalog/act.php?ac...

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