ATTO

ATTO's Disk Benchmark is a quick and easy freeware tool to measure drive performance across various transfer sizes.

ATTO Performance

Most drives should maintain very steady performance once they hit their limit.  The uneven performance on the second half of the test is a sign that the SP550 has some performance problems that deserve investigation with the rest of our benchmarks. That said, the graphs aren't as inconsistent as the Crucial BX200's, where it was obvious that it had severe issues.

AS-SSD

AS-SSD is another quick and free benchmark tool. It uses incompressible data for all of its tests, making it an easy way to keep an eye on which drives are relying on transparent data compression. The short duration of the test makes it a decent indicator of peak drive performance.

Incompressible Sequential Read PerformanceIncompressible Sequential Write Performance

The AS-SSD test is short enough that the SP550 doesn't run out of SLC cache headroom and into trouble, and its peak performance is fine for a low-end drive.

Idle Power Consumption

Since the ATSB tests based on real-world usage cut idle times short to 25ms, their power consumption scores paint an inaccurate picture of the relative suitability of drives for mobile use. During real-world client use, a solid state drive will spend far more time idle than actively processing commands. Our testbed doesn't support the deepest DevSlp power saving mode that SATA drives can implement, but we can measure the power usage in the intermediate slumber state where both the host and device ends of the SATA link enter a low-power state and the drive is free to engage its internal power savings measures.

We also report the drive's idle power consumption while the SATA link is active and not in any power saving state. Drives are required to be able to wake from the slumber state in under 10 milliseconds, but that still leaves plenty of room for them to add latency to a burst of I/O. Because of this, many desktops default to either not using SATA Aggressive Link Power Management (ALPM) at all or to only enable it partially without making use of the device-initiated power management (DIPM) capability. Additionally, SATA Hot-Swap is incompatible with the use of DIPM, so our SSD testbed usually has DIPM turned off during performance testing.

Active Idle Power Consumption (No ALPM)

When aggressive link power measurement is disabled, the SP550 doesn't do a particularly good job of saving power, and is much worse than its Phison-based competition.

Idle Power Consumption (HIPM+DIPM)

However when the SP550's power saving modes can kick in, Silicon Motion's efficiency shines and the idle power drops to near the limit of our meter's resolution. The Phison-based TLC drives fall slightly behind and the drives that don't implement device-initiated power management stand out.

Mixed Read/Write Performance Final Words
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  • tipoo - Wednesday, March 23, 2016 - link

    I never really thought about core counts in storage controllers before this review. What would your average mid range and high end SSDs have for controller CPUs?

    I think I also remember looking into this model for a cheap old laptop upgrade, but some reviews mentioned it didn't have a DRAM cache which made performance consistency very not consistent. That looks similar here in the charts, is this the one with no DRAM?
  • vladx - Wednesday, March 23, 2016 - link

    Most SSD controllers use dual or tri-core ARM Cortex-R4 configurations.
  • MrCommunistGen - Wednesday, March 23, 2016 - link

    The 2TB 850Pro/EVO article here on Anandtech has a table showing core counts and clock speeds of the recent Samsung SSD controllers: MDX, MEX, MGX, MHX, all of which are 3-core ARM Cortex R4 except for the MGX which is a dual core ARM Cortex R4.

    The breakdown is a bit complex but it looks like MDX is 840/840 Pro. MEX is 840 EVO, 128-1TB 850 Pro, and 1TB 850 EVO. MGX is 120-500GB 850 EVO, and MHX is in the 2TB 850 Pro/EVO.

    Going through historical articles (840 Pro review) I found that the Samsung 830's controller was called the MCX and it is implied but not directly stated that it was a 3-core ARM9 design.

    Not to toot my own horn, but the "Update" in the 840 Pro article regarding MDX being R4 rather than ARM9 was at least partially due to an email chain I had with Anand. Yes, I emailed him instead of blasting him in the comments section. As I recall, he said the original press kit had said ARM9. I'd seen Cortex-R4 elsewhere on the 'net, and Anand reached out to Samsung for confirmation. I assume he got it because he updated the article later that day.

    I don't remember seeing much info on core counts for other controllers, but the 840 Pro article also has a table where it notes DRAM Size for various controllers of the time. What's notable to me is that the old Intel controllers like in the X25M G2 didn't cache user data, only the mapping tables, so the G3 is listed in the table as using up to 64MB cache.

    Also notable is that the SandForce controllers didn't use a DRAM cache - probably a large part of their huge industry success, in addition to their (at the time) class leading performance, and the fact that they sold turn-key solutions to OEMs.
  • Billy Tallis - Wednesday, March 23, 2016 - link

    The SP550 uses Samsung DRAM. Silicon Motion does have a controller designed for DRAM-less MLC drives, but their controllers for TLC SSDs all still have a DRAM controller. I've been told that it's theoretically possible to use SM2256 or SM2258 without external DRAM, but I don't know if anyone has actually written the firmware necessary to accomplish that. The performance hit of operating without external DRAM is so far something that is usually only acceptable for USB drives, not mass-market SATA SSDs.
  • hojnikb - Wednesday, March 23, 2016 - link

    Well, sandforce and sm246xt perform just fine without dram
  • ghanz - Wednesday, March 23, 2016 - link

    In general, they perform fine for light & general user scenarios, but IOPS suffers.
    In SM2246XT product brief, random reads are quoted at 28,000 IOPS & random Write at 65,000 IOPS (120GB SSD with Toshiba 19nm MLC).

    Both Sandforce & SM2246XT are only used with MLC NAND since they were not design to work with TLC ones.
    The IOPS drop on a theoretical SSD controller without external dram & working with TLC NAND will be much worse I presume.
  • Samus - Wednesday, March 30, 2016 - link

    Any TLC platform without DRAM or an SLC caching mechanism is going to burn out the NAND; the wear leveling will be off the wall.
  • Pizzahut23 - Wednesday, March 23, 2016 - link

    Are we going to get a review of the phison PNY cs2211? It was recommend last month on the recommend budget SSD list. How does it compare to the legendary bx100 which is about the same price? Is it the new go to budget SSD?
  • Billy Tallis - Wednesday, March 23, 2016 - link

    I've tested both the PNY CS1311 and CS2211. They won't be the next review I post, but probably the one after that. As compared to the BX100, the CS2211 is very broadly in the same performance class, but its different controller architecture means it has very different strengths and weaknesses.
  • ghanz - Wednesday, March 23, 2016 - link

    Hi Billy, are there any plans to review the Sandisk Plus 240gb or/& 480gb?
    It's probably cheapest MLC drive in lower capacities now I believe.
    While it's similar to the Sandisk extreme 500, it will be interesting to see the differences of the same SM2246XT controller on a SATA3 interface instead of USB 3.0/3.1.
    It will also be interesting to compare a budget MLC drive with the influx of recent budget TLC drives.

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