Mixed IO Performance

For details on our mixed IO tests, please see the overview of our 2021 Consumer SSD Benchmark Suite.

Mixed IO Performance
Mixed Random IO Throughput Power Efficiency
Mixed Sequential IO Throughput Power Efficiency

The WD Black SN850's overall performance on the mixed random IO test is just behind the Samsung 980 PRO, but still very good for a flash-based SSD. However, its power efficiency on that test is only second-tier, behind the 980 PRO and the SK hynix Gold P31.

On the mixed sequential IO test, the SN850's performance is better than any of the 1TB drives, and almost as fast as the 2TB 980 PRO. It's still not quite as efficient as the 980 PRO and during this test it averages about 6.6W, which is definitely getting up to where a heatsink would be of use (for similarly long-running workloads).

Mixed Random IO
Mixed Sequential IO

On the mixed random IO test, the SN850 starts out with a lead over the 980 PRO for the most read-oriented mixes but then the 980 PRO takes a small lead for the rest of the test while always using less power. On the mixed sequential IO test, it seems like the larger SLC cache may be helping the SN850 get a performance boost relatively early while there are still more reads than writes, and it maintains leading performance as the mix gets more write-heavy. That means the SN850 ends up having a considerable performance advantage over the 1TB 980 PRO for a 50/50 mix that would be expected from a workload like copying files within the same SSD.

 

Power Management Features

Real-world client storage workloads leave SSDs idle most of the time, so the active power measurements presented earlier in this review only account for a small part of what determines a drive's suitability for battery-powered use. Especially under light use, the power efficiency of a SSD is determined mostly be how well it can save power when idle.

For many NVMe SSDs, the closely related matter of thermal management can also be important. M.2 SSDs can concentrate a lot of power in a very small space. They may also be used in locations with high ambient temperatures and poor cooling, such as tucked under a GPU on a desktop motherboard, or in a poorly-ventilated notebook.

WD Black SN850 1TB
NVMe Power and Thermal Management Features
Controller WD/SanDisk NVMe G2
Firmware 611100WD
NVMe
Version
Feature Status
1.0 Number of operational (active) power states 3
1.1 Number of non-operational (idle) power states 2
Autonomous Power State Transition (APST) Supported
1.2 Warning Temperature 84 °C
Critical Temperature 88 °C
1.3 Host Controlled Thermal Management Supported
 Non-Operational Power State Permissive Mode Supported

The WD Black SN850 implements the full range of power and thermal management features. It's specced for quick transitions in and out of its low-power sleep states. The drive indicates that it may use up to 9 W while active; it probably gets close at peak, but the highest sustained power draw we saw during our synthetic benchmarks was in the 7-8W range. Constraining this drive to either of its lower-power active states would definitely throttle performance by a lot.

WD Black SN850 1TB
NVMe Power States
Controller WD/SanDisk NVMe G2
Firmware 611100WD
Power
State
Maximum
Power
Active/Idle Entry
Latency
Exit
Latency
PS 0 9.0 W Active - -
PS 1 4.1 W Active - -
PS 2 3.5 W Active - -
PS 3 25 mW Idle 5 ms 10 ms
PS 4 5 mW Idle 5 ms 45 ms

Note that the above tables reflect only the information provided by the drive to the OS. The power and latency numbers are often very conservative estimates, but they are what the OS uses to determine which idle states to use and how long to wait before dropping to a deeper idle state.

Idle Power Measurement

SATA SSDs are tested with SATA link power management disabled to measure their active idle power draw, and with it enabled for the deeper idle power consumption score and the idle wake-up latency test. Our testbed, like any ordinary desktop system, cannot trigger the deepest DevSleep idle state.

Idle power management for NVMe SSDs is far more complicated than for SATA SSDs. NVMe SSDs can support several different idle power states, and through the Autonomous Power State Transition (APST) feature the operating system can set a drive's policy for when to drop down to a lower power state. There is typically a tradeoff in that lower-power states take longer to enter and wake up from, so the choice about what power states to use may differ for desktop and notebooks, and depending on which NVMe driver is in use. Additionally, there are multiple degrees of PCIe link power savings possible through Active State Power Management (APSM).

We report three idle power measurements. Active idle is representative of a typical desktop, where none of the advanced PCIe link or NVMe power saving features are enabled and the drive is immediately ready to process new commands. Our Desktop Idle number represents what can usually be expected from a desktop system that is configured to enable SATA link power management, PCIe ASPM and NVMe APST, but where the lowest PCIe L1.2 link power states are not available. The Laptop Idle number represents the maximum power savings possible with all the NVMe and PCIe power management features in use—usually the default for a battery-powered system but rarely achievable on a desktop even after changing BIOS and OS settings. Since we don't have a way to enable SATA DevSleep on any of our testbeds, SATA drives are omitted from the Laptop Idle charts.

Idle Power Consumption - No PMIdle Power Consumption - DesktopIdle Power Consumption - Laptop

Typically for Western Digital's NVMe controllers, the active idle power consumption from the SN850 is high at over 1W, and the desktop idle state only drops that by 35%. But the SN850's deepest idle state gets power draw down to the appropriate range for use in a laptop. Wakeup from the desktop idle state is almost instant, but waking up from the deepest idle is quite a bit slower than on Samsung's drives. The SN850 still wakes up several milliseconds faster than indicated by its firmware, and it's not slow enough to be a serious concern for system responsiveness.

Idle Wake-Up Latency

Advanced Synthetic Tests: Block Sizes and Cache Size Effects Conclusion: Speedy
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  • Samus - Tuesday, March 23, 2021 - link

    eva: true. SATA hasn't been updated in over a decade (unlike SAS) and it'll be some time before consumer-class drives can saturate a 6Gbps link (currently almost none can even saturate a 3Gbps link.)

    With MAMR, HAMR, etc coming to market, performance is finally going to increase where areal density was historically the only way sequential transfers went up, so drives might start cracking SATA2 bandwidth. I suspect when drives near SATA3 bandwidth, it'll either be so long from now that hard disk technology in the consumer space will be dead (replaced by cheap NAND storage) as hard disk technology seems to be focusing on data centers where SAS is common and already capable of 12Gbps+, or consumers that wish to actually use magnetic disk storage will adopt SAS.
  • Molor1880 - Thursday, March 18, 2021 - link

    2.5 in drives and U.X won't make a comeback outside a server room, which is what that combination is designed for. The trend for personal devices is smaller and lighter, not bigger and bulkier. I would expect M.2 and gum stick drives to evolve, in step with PCIe, but it's not going away for at least another decade.
  • Tomatotech - Thursday, March 18, 2021 - link

    2.5” is dead for casual home use. I used to think it had a place in the office, but with the rise of laptop-powered WFH and the popularity of space-saving small SFF computers for the office I don’t see it as having a future.

    Your point about cost makes no sense. 2 TB+ of SSD chips is expensive. It makes no difference whether it’s on an m.2 stick or in a half empty U.3 case, it costs the same either way. With U.3 there’s a (small) extra cost for the packaging, plus the extra wires and extra ports required and extra assembly steps. Might be worth it in the datacentre but not for price-sensitive home or office market where 99% of drives are never swapped.
  • Tomatotech - Thursday, March 18, 2021 - link

    Ninja’d by Molor1880!
  • WaltC - Thursday, March 18, 2021 - link

    I think M.2 is here to stay. You are looking for economies of scale in NVMe M.2 drive capacity--that will happen as time goes on. It's remarkable to me how fast M.2 drives have ratcheted up in performance and capacity already. But, hey, if you need the economic capacity there's always the old 7200 rpm standby, right? These super-capacity drives will be around for a long while--but eventually M.2 will supplant them, imo.

    My older PCIe3 960 EVO M.2 boot drive would throttle regularly in large tasks, like doing a full AV Defender scan on C:\. The drive always crashed and never completed a full C:\ scan. This doesn't happen with the 980 Pro at all, and it's running in the same mboard and in the same slot the 960 ran in--using the same heatsink--just a flat sink that came with the mboard. Things are improving rapidly on the NVMe M.2 front, imo.
  • damianrobertjones - Friday, March 19, 2021 - link

    "Threw is the past tense of the verb throw. It’s the word you use to say that something threw you for a loop or threw you off. Through is an adverb and a preposition. It’s used to say that you entered on one side of something and exited on the other."

    Not sure if 2.5" drives have gone anywhere?
  • twotwotwo - Wednesday, April 21, 2021 - link

    There are a few 4 and 8TB m.2 drives out already, so a stick with more than 2TB might be practical for you before any switch to the mostly-enterprise u.3 form factor. Not that there's anything wrong with holding on to your current stuff! :)
  • Makaveli - Thursday, March 18, 2021 - link

    "Later this year we're expecting another wave of Phison E18 drives to arrive using 176L 3D TLC NAND"

    This is what i'm waiting to see.

    I don't like that all the new generation drives also all took a reduction in TBW and all seem to have smaller SLC caches minus this WD drive.
  • ozzuneoj86 - Thursday, March 18, 2021 - link

    With the SK Hynix P31 performing so well for the money, especially in efficiency, I'll be keeping an eye out for PCI-E 4.0 offerings from them.

    I'm currently booting from a 2.5" MX500 1TB. Since I have an X570 board, it feels like my next drive purchase should be PCI-E 4.0. Thankfully, I doubt these things provide any appreciable difference in performance over a good SATA SSD for the vast majority of applications I use, so I can stand to wait for the prices to come down. Given the choice between buying a 1TB SSD with blistering fast performance for $200, or one that generally benchmarks lower but uses less power, runs cooler and provides an almost identical experience for $135 (with sales often much lower)... its hard to justify the more expensive one.
  • lmcd - Thursday, March 18, 2021 - link

    Imo in a laptop it's impossible to justify a faster SSD that consumes more power.

    In a desktop, though, I can see it making sense for certain workloads.

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