Sequential Read Performance

Our first test of sequential read performance uses short bursts of 128MB, issued as 128kB operations with no queuing. The test averages performance across eight bursts for a total of 1GB of data transferred from a drive containing 16GB of data. Between each burst the drive is given enough idle time to keep the overall duty cycle at 20%.

Burst 128kB Sequential Read (Queue Depth 1)

Both of the 8TB QLC SSDs provide burst sequential read performance that is on par for their respective market segments. The Sabrent Rocket Q performs similarly to both the Mushkin Helix DRAMless TLC and Intel 660p QLC SSDs. The 8TB Samsung 870 QVO is just a bit slower than the other Samsung SATA SSDs.

Our test of sustained sequential reads uses queue depths from 1 to 32, with the performance and power scores computed as the average of QD1, QD2 and QD4. Each queue depth is tested for up to one minute or 32GB transferred, from a drive containing 64GB of data. This test is run twice: once with the drive prepared by sequentially writing the test data, and again after the random write test has mixed things up, causing fragmentation inside the SSD that isn't visible to the OS. These two scores represent the two extremes of how the drive would perform under real-world usage, where wear leveling and modifications to some existing data will create some internal fragmentation that degrades performance, but usually not to the extent shown here.

Sustained 128kB Sequential Read

On the longer sequential read tests, the Sabrent Rocket Q starts to fall behind the other low-end NVMe drives, though it still offers competitive performance reading data that was written with random writes. The Samsung 870 QVO holds on to its status as only slightly slower than the other Samsung SATA drives, but due to the SATA bottleneck this is still far slower than any of the NVMe drives.

Sustained 128kB Sequential Read (Power Efficiency)
Power Efficiency in MB/s/W Average Power in W

The Sabrent Rocket Q is clearly the least efficient consumer NVMe drive in this bunch for sequential reads of contiguous data; the DRAMless TLC drives outperform it while using much less power, and the more power-hungry high-end TLC SSDs have higher performance to match. The 8TB Samsung 870 QVO again scores just a bit worse than its lower-capacity siblings, because the 8TB model is slightly slower and draws slightly more power.

Like many Phison-based NVMe SSDs, the Sabrent Rocket Q's sequential read performance doesn't really begin to scale up until queue depths go beyond 4, explaining its poor low-QD scores above. By QD16 it is basically saturating the PCIe 3 x4 interface. The Samsung 870 QVO saturates the SATA interface starting at QD2.

Sequential Reads - All Drives
Sabrent Rocket Q 8TB Samsung 870 QVO 8TB

While both 8TB drives saturate their respective host interfaces with sequential reads when the queue depths are sufficiently high, they also both draw more power than average among our entire collection of test results. However, neither is power-hungry enough to stand out as an outlier from that crowd.

Sequential Write Performance

Our test of sequential write burst performance is structured identically to the sequential read burst performance test save for the direction of the data transfer. Each burst writes 128MB as 128kB operations issued at QD1, for a total of 1GB of data written to a drive containing 16GB of data.

Burst 128kB Sequential Write (Queue Depth 1)

The burst sequential write test primarily illustrates SLC cache performance, and the Sabrent Rocket Q does quite well here, outperforming the rest of the NVMe drives in this bunch. The 8TB Samsung 870 QVO is the slowest drive, but is only slightly slower than the other SATA drives.

Our test of sustained sequential writes is structured identically to our sustained sequential read test, save for the direction of the data transfers. Queue depths range from 1 to 32 and each queue depth is tested for up to one minute or 32GB, followed by up to one minute of idle time for the drive to cool off and perform garbage collection. The test is confined to a 64GB span of the drive.

Sustained 128kB Sequential Write

On the longer sequential write test, the Rocket Q falls behind the high-end consumer NVMe drives but remains clearly faster than the other budget NVMe drives. Meanwhile, the 8TB 870 QVO stays in last place, but is not actually meaningfully slower than the other SATA drives.

Sustained 128kB Sequential Write (Power Efficiency)
Power Efficiency in MB/s/W Average Power in W

The Sabrent Rocket Q has the worst power efficiency among the consumer NVMe drives during the sequential write test, but it still offers better performance per Watt than the SATA drives. The 8TB 870 QVO has a lower efficiency score than the other consumer SATA drives, but the enterprise drives are even worse.

Both of the 8TB QLC drives hit their full sequential write speed at QD2 and maintain it for the rest of the test without the SLC cache running out. However, the performance from the Rocket Q is a somewhat variable, probably indicating that it is affected by background work the controller is doing to flush the SLC cache.

Sequential Writes - All Drives
Sabrent Rocket Q 8TB Samsung 870 QVO 8TB

Plotted against the full set of results from all the SATA SSDs we've tested, the performance and power consumption of the 8TB 870 QVO on the sequential write test appears to be good but not pushing any limits. The Rocket Q's performance is higher than most entry-level NVMe drives, but its power consumption creeps up to unusually high levels (over 6W).

Random I/O Performance Mixed Read/Write Performance
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  • Oxford Guy - Tuesday, December 8, 2020 - link

    Samsung doing it isn’t shocking. It’s Samsung after all.
  • Palorim12 - Monday, December 14, 2020 - link

    idk if you remember when they did the change from TLC to 3-bit MLC, but I member. It was after all that stuff went down with the 840 EVO. Despite all TLC having this issue across all brands, Samsung was the first to push TLC, so when the slow down issue creeped up, Samsung got the brunt of the complaints, and ppl to this day will use that as a reason as why Samsung "sucks", despite the fact that the issue started creeping up on sandisk and other TLC drives that had entered the market much later after Samsung did. And by the time Samsung figured out the problem and fixed it, all the other manufacturers copied the fix and then really started pushing their own TLC products.

    And TBH, TLC products since then have been pretty good. I recommend 850 EVOs, and now 860 EVOs to all my friends who want to switch to SSDs but are worried about the price. I've only recommended 2-bit MLC drives to ppl who I know will hit the drive had with writes with the type of work they do.
  • at_clucks - Wednesday, December 9, 2020 - link

    @shabby, other companies have done worse if you ask me, like switching from MLC to TLC mid way through a product's run. Good luck with identifying the exact type of NAND based on decoding a SN without having the decoder ring, especially when the product is still in the store's warehouse.
  • phoenix_rizzen - Monday, December 7, 2020 - link

    Switching to a number would really simplify things.

    1LC
    2LC
    3LC
    4LC
    ...

    But since when has logic been part of marketing?
  • Billy Tallis - Monday, December 14, 2020 - link

    I've already pretty much decided that if we ever get real products that store 5 bits per cell, I won't use any abbreviations that don't include the numeral 5. Stuff like 3bpc, 4bpc, 5bpc would make a lot more sense than current industry conventions.
  • redzo - Tuesday, December 22, 2020 - link

    This. It's been a long time since my last post at anand.

    Consumers have no idea of what they are purchasing. They are basically sheep.

    QVO is nice if it is priced right. It should be priced way less.

    I just purchased a 3d nand TLC 1TB for less than an intel/crucial/samsung qvo equivalent. This is not right. Manufacturers of NAND flash and product manufacturers are taking advantage of misinformed consumers.

    More so. Most products are missing important specs like controller model, dramless or not, or even NAND type. This is just ridiculous.
  • dontlistentome - Saturday, December 5, 2020 - link

    If you want MLC or TLC then buy it - they cost more because they cost more to make. I've just bought a 2TB SSD for the old man - paid the 15% or so extra for TLC over QLC.
    There's no conspiracy here or evil manufacturers. They do R&D then offer a product and see if consumers buy it. Almost all consumers, even those that claim not to be are driven pricipally by price, hence QLC being populat when the buyer looks at the ticket.
  • Oxford Guy - Sunday, December 6, 2020 - link

    Economy of scale makes your comment fail.
  • DigitalFreak - Monday, December 7, 2020 - link

    +1 for your mad rhyming skills.
  • Kangal - Tuesday, December 8, 2020 - link

    Lmao.
    But for real, I thought we would have hit 8TB Sata-SSDs like last year for around USD $650. Instead I'm seeing these still yet to launch proper, and priced around $1,000. It's definitely true the market isn't dominated as much by the consumers, as it is dominated by the actual suppliers.

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