Packaging

Once the drive has exited the validation station without any errors, it's considered to be fully functional and is ready to be packaged.

Before the drive is put inside the retail package, the labels are put on the metal chassis. Currently this is done manually and requires extreme precision from the worker, but this is an area OCZ is looking to automate to reduce costs and increase the throughput of the factory.

The folding of the cardboard retail boxes has already been automated and is done by the machine above. 

The drives and accessories are put inside the retail box by hand and the last step in the process is to wrap the complete box in plastic. The wrap is folded over itself, resulting in a pocket where the retail package is pushed into. The package will then go through a heat tunnel, which shrinks the plastic a creates a tight wrap.

The retails boxes are then put inside 10-drive shipping boxes. The shipping boxes and the black holders have actually been designed by OCZ and are something that Mr. Van Pattern introduced shortly after joining the company. The new design is much more tolerable to drops and pressure in order to keep the retail packages cosmetically in tact and the 10-drive size is easy to ship around. OCZ does drop tests periodically to ensure that both the retail package as well as the shipping box quality hasn't degraded and the drives are safe.

The last stop for the drive before it's shipped out is, of course, the warehouse, which also concludes our factory tour.

Final Words

First of all, I'd like to thank OCZ and PTI for giving us the exclusive inside look of their factory. Usually we only get to see the final product, but not the steps that are taken to develop and build the drive. As we saw, the actual assembly process of an SSD is not very complex, but there is a tremendous amount of continuous testing to keep the quality high. Some tests, such as the box drop test, may seem a bit redundant, but ultimately it's these little things and aspects that build a high quality product. 

That said, I'm not an engineering or manufacturing expert, so it would be wrong for me to "review" OCZ's processes. What I can say, though, is that OCZ's attitude towards quality and reliability has completely changed. In the past it wasn't unheard of that a product would only spend roughly three months in development before entering mass production, but now even the qualification phase of the development process is typically longer. 

All in all, the new OCZ is well aware of its questionable quality reputation from the past and is now doing everything it can to build the trust back. It won't happen overnight, but opening up the whole development and manufacturing process is a way of showing that OCZ has nothing to hide when it comes to quality.

Firmware Installation & Run-In Testing
Comments Locked

64 Comments

View All Comments

  • Murloc - Wednesday, May 20, 2015 - link

    cosmically in tact?

    Lol I guess it's the jet lag or the phone dictionary.
  • harrynsally - Wednesday, May 20, 2015 - link

    From reading actual user reviews (e.g. # of 5/4 stars vs. 1/2 starts at places like Newegg), I have not gone wrong after buying a number of Samsung 850 EVO and Micron/Crucial MX100 250GB class SSDs.

    Of course it's not just counting stars, but understanding the user experience/satisfaction.

    Although SSD street prices have really come down recently (e.g.currently 250 GB class 850 EVO = $89, ARC 100 $69 after $20 OCZ rebate etc.), will move up to 500 GB SSDs. After reading reviews in this size, my money still goes to Samsung and/or Crucial.
  • ocz_tuff_bunny - Wednesday, May 20, 2015 - link

    Hi harrynsally,
    Thank you for your comment. We totally agree when choosing a SSD it's not just counting stars, but understanding the user experience/satisfaction. OCZ is a new organization under Toshiba and have made significant changes to everything from processes to production. We hope one day we will have the opportunity to show you our commitment to user experience/satisfaction through our products.
  • RU482 - Wednesday, May 20, 2015 - link

    ummm, where did my post go?
  • Shadow7037932 - Wednesday, May 20, 2015 - link

    Wow, I'm surprised they are using normal PCs for loading up the firmware. I would have expected some custom setup for this. I guess at these volumes it makes sense to to it this way.
  • RyanVM - Thursday, May 21, 2015 - link

    Hate to say it, but OCZ as a brand is too toxic for me to touch anymore.
  • edlee - Thursday, May 21, 2015 - link

    I am not sure why they are still using ocz brand, I would much rather hear them call it Toshiba performance line, ocz will always have a negative connotation in my subconscious.

    I understand its run by Toshiba, and completely different management style but still, I feel safer with a big brand name behind my ssd, like crucial and Samsung. I would accept Toshiba as a quality band supplier , just dump the ocz brand
  • Murloc - Thursday, May 21, 2015 - link

    I don't feel safe with samsung after the 840 evo fiasco
  • Oxford Guy - Friday, May 22, 2015 - link

    The EVO sucks but it's not even close to the OCZ fiasco with the Vertex 2. That involved pure bait and switch fraud and worse. Then they followed it up with the 3 line which was also buggy.
  • Oxford Guy - Friday, May 22, 2015 - link

    "I am not sure why they are still using ocz brand"

    For the same reason Nvidia's website lists the 970 as having 4 GB of 224 GB/s VRAM. They know consumers are stupid, generally — with attention spans rivaling the common gnat.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now