Conclusion: Entry Level QLC

The Corsair MP400 has proved to be a competent budget NVMe SSD in its 1TB version. The recent crop of drives like the Corsair MP400 and Sabrent Rocket has raised the bar for consumer QLC SSDs. That being said, the a 1TB QLC drive is relatively low capacity for the controller, and there are performance compromises that go along with that (compared to the 8TB relatives we looked at last week). At mainstream capacities they can compete against many budget TLC SSDs, and at the higher capacities where there are few or no budget TLC options, many of the benefits of QLC NAND come into play.

The MP400 sits on the boundary between a good TLC drive and an entry level QLC drive. It performs as expected, and the key arbiter in going for this drive is going to be in the cost.

When Does QLC Make Sense? An Overview

Based on our testing, QLC drive capacities below 1TB (such as 500 GB), we recommend avoiding QLC SSDs. These smaller capacities are where DRAMless TLC SSDs are clearly the better value, and more mainstream TLC drives with DRAM are often on sale for entry-level prices as well. Above 1TB, the DRAMless TLC options are few and far between, and we don't expect any of them to handle heavier workloads as easily as 2+TB QLC drives with DRAM do.

At the 1TB capacity point we're focused on today, the conclusion is not as clear. The Corsair MP400 generally outperformed the low-end TLC drives we have to compare against, though our collection is missing a few of the best-performing budget TLC options on the market today. It is pretty clear that DRAMless TLC SSDs have the edge in power efficiency.

For general purpose consumer desktop usage, both QLC and TLC entry-level NVMe drives offer better performance than SATA SSDs, and with little or no price premium. Which kind of entry-level NVMe drive is the better really comes down to day to day pricing.

Budget NVMe Consumer SSD Price Comparison
December 11, 2020
  PCIe
DRAM
NAND 500GB 1TB 2TB 4TB 8TB
NVMe PCIe 3.0
ADATA XPG SX8100 3.0 x4
Yes
TLC
8ch
$59.99 (12¢/GB) $94.99
(9¢/GB)
$229.99 (11¢/GB) $499.99 (12¢/GB) -
ADATA Swordfish 3.0 x4
No
TLC
4ch
$54.99 (11¢/GB) $94.99
(9¢/GB)
$189.99 (9¢/GB) - -
Corsair MP400 3.0 x4
Yes
QLC
8ch
- $114.99 (11¢/GB) $244.99 (12¢/GB) $662.00 (17¢/GB) $1498.00 (19¢/GB)
Inland Platinum 3.0 x4
Yes
QLC
8ch
- $94.99
(9¢/GB)
$193.99 (10¢/GB) $499.99 (12¢/GB) -
Intel 660p 3.0 x4
Yes
QLC
4ch
$59.99 (12¢/GB) $109.99 (11¢/GB) $209.99 (10¢/GB) - -
Intel 665p 3.0 x4
Yes
QLC
4ch
- $109.99 (11¢/GB) $239.99 (12¢/GB) - -
Kingston A2000 3.0 x4
Yes
TLC
4ch
$53.99 (11¢/GB) $102.99 (10¢/GB) - - -
Mushkin ALPHA 3.0 x4
Yes
QLC
8ch
- - - $599.99 (15¢/GB) $1299.99 (16¢/GB)
Mushkin Helix-L 3.0 x4
No
TLC
4ch
$54.99 (11¢/GB) $89.99
(9¢/GB)
- - -
Sabrent Rocket Q 3.0 x4
Yes
QLC
8ch
$64.99 (13¢/GB) $109.98 (11¢/GB) $219.98 (11¢/GB) $599.98 (15¢/GB) $1299.99 (16¢/GB)
WD Blue SN550 3.0 x4
No
TLC
8ch
$53.99 (11¢/GB) $104.99 (10¢/GB) $247.99 (12¢/GB) - -
NVMe PCIe 4.0
Sabrent Rocket Q 4.0 4.0 x4
Yes
QLC
8ch
- $149.98 (15¢/GB) $319.99 (16¢/GB) $689.98 (17¢/GB) -
Addlink S92 4.0 x4
Yes
QLC
8ch
- $145.88 (15¢/GB) $277.88 (14¢/GB) $649.99 (16¢/GB) -
SATA
Samsung 870 QVO SATA
Yes
QLC - $89.99
(9¢/GB)
$199.99 (10¢/GB) $419.99 (10¢/GB) $861.27 (11¢/GB)

The handful of multi-TB QLC drives using the Phison E12S controller are competing not just on price, but on the vendor's ability to keep the drive in stock. From day to day, we're seeing the best-priced models quickly end up backordered, so there's clearly demand for these massive SSDs but the prices should drift downward a bit as these drives become more widely available from multiple brands. The Corsair MP400 hasn't been on the market for as long as the Sabrent Rocket Q, so the latter currently has it beat on pricing and availability. Microcenter's Inland Platinum QLC drive seems to still be the cheapest Phison E12S+QLC drive on the market, with especially attractive pricing for the 4TB model.

Even though the proliferation of new QLC alternatives has broadened the scope of the entry-level NVMe market segment, these drives are still almost always overshadowed by the best deals in the more mainstream NVMe market segment that is dominated by drives with TLC and DRAM and 8-channel controllers. Right now with holiday pricing, it is very easy to score a drive that doesn't have any of the acute weaknesses of DRAMless or QLC models, without paying a premium. The best example is ADATA's XPG SX8100, a TLC drive with Realtek's 8-channel controller with DRAM. The SX8100 is one of the few TLC models with a 4TB option so it competes against high-capacity QLC models, and beats many of them on price at all capacity points.

Our next look into consumer QLC SSDs will be Sabrent's Rocket Q4, the successor to the Rocket Q that adopts the Phison E16 PCIe 4.0 controller. Even though the newer Phison E18 Gen4 controller is starting to ship in high-end SSDs, The E18 is probably overkill for QLC models, and it's certainly more expensive. The E16 controller may stick around for a while to offer a more affordable path toward better QLC performance.

Next Review: SSD Benchmark Suite Update for PCIe Gen 4

This review marks the end of our current generation of SSD testing equipment and procedures. Our new overhauled test suite designed for PCIe Gen4 SSDs will be launching soon, along with a new section in Bench for the new test results. The existing SSD18 results will remain available with no further updates. Many recent drives we have already reviewed will be re-tested on our new SSD test suite and their results will be added to the new SSD21 section as they are completed.

 
Mixed Read/Write Performance And Power Management
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  • madmilk - Saturday, December 12, 2020 - link

    The 840 Evo is probably the worst drive Samsung has ever shipped. The first gen 2D TLC memory in the drives caused a ton of performance issues thanks to losing the charge in the flash cells leaking out rather quickly. Samsung had to push out a bunch of firmware bandaids for the issue and switched to 3D TLC for the 850 Evo. Even then, I don't think many people managed to wear them out.
  • Beaver M. - Saturday, December 12, 2020 - link

    My 840 is stored at low temperatures 5 months a year without any power source. Still works like new.
  • Spunjji - Monday, December 14, 2020 - link

    The 840 (not Pro, not Evo) would definitely take that title - it's like the Evo but without any caching or a firmware fix for the read degradation. Even with that said, I still have a couple of the absolute worst-case drives - the 840 120GB - hanging around in service as boot drives for seldom-used systems, which is a role they perform relatively well even in spite of their unique form of bit-rot. Maybe it's because Windows 10 basically rewrites the whole damn OS every 6 months? 😂
  • Oxford Guy - Monday, December 14, 2020 - link

    "which is a role they perform relatively well even in"

    Not according to HardOCP which found they had worse steady state performance than laptop hard drives.
  • Gigaplex - Wednesday, December 16, 2020 - link

    It was still better than the 840 non-Evo
  • Beaver M. - Saturday, December 12, 2020 - link

    If your case is worth anything, then the logical conclusion for SSD manufacturers should be to increase warranty and TBW massively.
    Huh. I wonder why they dont.
  • joesiv - Monday, December 14, 2020 - link

    Care to share your SMART data for one of the drives? I'm curious.
  • lmcd - Friday, December 11, 2020 - link

    While this drive is an interesting reference point, that extra $20 (or less) for a SK Hynix P31 is easily worth it.
  • Zzzoom - Friday, December 11, 2020 - link

    DWPD calculations on page 1 are wrong.
  • zepi - Saturday, December 12, 2020 - link

    This latest gen QLC with 8 channels looks too good so that it would disappear...

    In sizes from 2TB and up, it iss probably a good choice for anyone looking for a cheap drive. And thanks to SLC caching 4k random writes are crazy fast.

    One can always increase SLC cache amount by leaving 50-100G unpartitioned to make sure there is good amount of SOC cache even when filling the drive with one more Steam download.

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