Burst IO Performance

Our burst IO tests run at a queue depth of one and the amount of data transferred is limited to ensure that SLC write buffers don't fill up and controllers don't overheat. In between each burst there's enough idle time to keep the drive averaging a 20% duty cycle, allowing for some buffered writes and deferred garbage collection to be completed. The random read and write tests use 4kB operations and the sequential tests use 128kB operations. All the burst tests are confined to a 16GB portion of the drive, so DRAMless SSDs are not disadvantaged as much as they are for larger tests.

QD1 Burst IO Performance
Random Read Random Write
Sequential Read Sequential Write

The Samsung 870 QVOs show significant improvement to QD1 random read performance, with the 1TB model still outperforming the 4TB model. QLC still imposes a bit of a performance penalty relative to mainstream SATA drives, but the biggest difference on display here is naturally from the NVMe drive serving the reads entirely out of its huge SLC cache.

For random writes at QD1, the 870 QVO is a stark regression from its predecessor, which was on par with the TLC-based 860 EVO. The 870 QVO is now clearly slower than mainstream TLC SSDs and is barely faster than the slower DRAMless competitor.

Sequential reads and writes at QD1 both show slight improvements, but these drives are almost all simply bumping against the limits of the SATA interface.

Sustained IO Performance

Our sustained IO tests measure performance on queue depths up to 32, but the scores reported here are only the averages for the low queue depths (1,2,4) that are most representative of real-world consumer workloads. Each queue depth is tested for up to one minute or 32GB, and the tests are confined to a 64GB span of the drive.

Sustained IO Performance
Random Read Random Write
Sequential Read Sequential Write
Sustained IO Performance
Random Read Random Write
Sequential Read Sequential Write

The most notable performance changes the 870 QVO brings to the sustained IO tests are from the 1TB model, which has greatly improved both random and sequential write performance. However, this comes at the cost of reduced random read performance, which is also a weakness for the 4TB model.

Power efficiency from the 870 QVOs during the sustained IO tests ranges from poor to average. Samsung's controller and LPDDR4 help keep power draw in check, but ultimately it takes more energy to operate slower, more complicated QLC NAND.

Performance at a glance
Random Read Random Write
Sequential Read Sequential Write

Looking at the big picture of the 870 QVO against all the other drives we've tested shows that the 870 QVO can reach the same top speeds as most SATA drives for three out of the four workload types. Random reads are the exception, where even high queue depths don't bring the 870 QVO up to the SATA limits during our sustained test, and the power draw is clearly on the high side there as well.

Random Read
Random Write
Sequential Read
Sequential Write

Compared to its predecessor, the 870 QVO brings slight improvements to random read performance, mainly at higher queue depths, while keeping power consumption almost unchanged. Random write performance has changed drastically for the 1TB QVO: the 1TB 870 is able to ramp up to much higher random write speeds, keeping pace with the 4TB model until the very end of the test when the smaller drive's cache finally runs out in spite of the idle time between phases of the test. The older 1TB 860 QVO's random write speed was constrained almost from the very beginning of the test. The 1TB 860 QVO also used to show a bit of fall-off in sequential read performance as the test reached higher capacities, and that behavior is gone with the 870 QVO. Sequential writes show a similarly drastic improvement for the 1TB 870 QVO, now able to generally keep pace with the larger model, which was not remotely the case for the previous generation.

Some of the big differences in write speed shown for the 1TB QVOs here may be an artifact of this test's size and duration, but even so it is clear that the smallest QV

AnandTech Storage Bench Mixed Read/Write Performance & Power Management
Comments Locked

64 Comments

View All Comments

  • Oxford Guy - Tuesday, June 30, 2020 - link

    QLC is a bad product at a bad price.
  • scineram - Friday, July 3, 2020 - link

    Narrator: "There are bad products"
  • Operandi - Tuesday, June 30, 2020 - link

    I think Samsung is just cashing in a bit on their name and reputation they built up over the years when even the a lot of the bigger names in memory and storage had drives with questionable reliability and performance.

    Having said that the 4TB and 8TB drives are fine since nobody else can really play in that space. Maybe Samsung shoudn't even bother with sub 4TB for the QVO series. It would certainly look better from a market perspective.
  • Oxford Guy - Tuesday, June 30, 2020 - link

    Samsung's reliability hasn't been so legendary. There was the regular 840 drive that was so bad in the 128 GB capacity that even without steady state it was like laptop hard drive slow. Then there was the 840 EVO that needed a kludge work-around to "solve" the problem of random data loss.
  • Daro - Tuesday, June 30, 2020 - link

    All my SSDs that died were Samsung: 3 840 evos, and 2 850 evos. I ll ve never buy another samsung SSD in my life.
  • leexgx - Wednesday, July 1, 2020 - link

    It's really random luck on failure of an SSD (only had 1 samsung evo witch I might of destroyed
    system was ignored for over 30 days powered up, when I got to it the system was up at desktop,but nothing would open so hard to force power cycle it had smart fail no boot, I think something was writing constantly to the ssd or power issue,, other 3 ssds was cheap SanDisk plus (I think) after 6-12 months they started missing data on reads
  • voicequal - Thursday, July 2, 2020 - link

    I've never personally lost data on a Samsung SSD, which can't be said for others. 840 EVOs were a stretch, pushing TLC planar NAND to its limits, but 850 EVOs cleared that up with V-NAND. Now we're back to QLC pushing the limits again.
  • khanikun - Monday, July 6, 2020 - link

    Reason I stopped buying Samsung. Everything I've bought from them has broken in some way. Not broken enough that they don't work, but broken enough that they were annoying. Monitors, the power button would semi-function. I'd be slapping the button with my finger to get it to turn on/off. Be doing that like 10 times until it'd eventually go.

    Only had one SSD from Samsung. Got it for free with my monitor. Some Newegg deal. It started getting bad sectors in a year. Samsung TV, the remote stopped working. Samsung bluray player, simply broke. I just avoid them now.
  • eek2121 - Tuesday, June 30, 2020 - link

    The prices are...underwhelming to say the least. While this may be cheaper than other Samsung drives, Samsung does not exist in a void. There are other TLC and even MLC drives that can be had cheaper. Anything above $100/tb is too much IMO, unless there is a compelling reason (such as performance) to justify the premium.
  • eek2121 - Tuesday, June 30, 2020 - link

    The Crucial MX500, BX500, Sandisk SSD Plus, and many other SSDs are available on Amazon right now for $199.99 for a 2TB offering.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now