Conclusion

At no point in our testing did the ADATA XPG SX950 convince us that it deserves to be regarded as a high-end SATA SSD, nor did it provide any evidence that the high-end SATA segment is still relevant. Under the right conditions, the SX950 can perform as fast as any other SATA SSD, but those are all the same tests where a low-end SATA SSD also performs fine.

Without the performance headroom that PCIe SSDs enjoy, a premium SATA SSD needs to distinguish itself by offering great performance in all conditions, under light or heavy workloads. The SX950 does the opposite. The aggressive SLC caching it uses to deliver high peak performance is a double-edged sword. When subjected to a large volume of writes, the SX950 accrues a large debt of cache flushing and garbage collection that have been deferred. Once the SLC cache fills up, the SX950's performance tanks. Both reads and writes suffer, though write performance much moreso. Worse, it takes the SX950 too long to finish cleaning up even when given the opportunity. The five minutes of idle time our test protocol reserves after filling the drive in preparation for some of the ATSB tests is clearly not long enough, and even during the ATSB Light test the SX950 can't finish catching up on its garbage collection.

The more recent Crucial BX300 uses the same Micron 32L 3D MLC and the same Silicon Motion SM2258 controller, but exhibits a completely different performance profile. Micron learned their lesson about taking SLC caching unnecessarily far on MLC drives with the Crucial MX200, and the BX300 has fairly small fixed-size SLC caches. This leads it to have lower performance than the SX950 under favorable conditions, but the BX300 holds up well under pressure.

The ADATA SX950 offers twice the warranty period of a typical budget SSD and a fairly high write endurance rating, but those are the only ways in which it can be regarded as a premium product. It doesn't even provide TCG Opal encryption support, a distinguishing feature that only a handful of SSD vendors implement for retail SSDs. Micron's first-generation 3D NAND is simply too slow to compete against Samsung's 3D NAND, and the SM2258 is a low-cost/low-power SSD controller that is ill-suited for competing against Marvell and Samsung controllers on performance. The result is a drive that not only falls far short of its lofty performance goals, but a drive that has unbalanced performance and makes poor use of the resources it has at hand.

SATA SSD Price Comparison
  240-275GB 480-525GB 960-1050GB
ADATA XPG SX950 $135.22 (56¢/GB) $269.99 (50¢/GB)  
ADATA SU800 $89.99 (35¢/GB) $158.65 (31¢/GB) $274.99 (27¢/GB)
Crucial BX300 $89.99 (38¢/GB) $149.99 (31¢/GB)  
Crucial MX300 $92.99 (34¢/GB) $149.99 (29¢/GB) $279.99 (27¢/GB)
Intel SSD 545s $99.99 (39¢/GB) $179.99 (35¢/GB)  
Samsung 850 PRO $128.98 (50¢/GB) $223.32 (44¢/GB) $447.87 (44¢/GB)
Samsung 850 EVO $99.95 (40¢/GB) $159.99 (32¢/GB) $327.99 (33¢/GB)
SanDisk Ultra 3D $99.99 (40¢/GB) $164.99 (33¢/GB) $284.99 (29¢/GB)
WD Blue 3D NAND $98.39 (38¢/GB) $164.65 (33¢/GB) $299.99 (30¢/GB)

On a budget SSD, the problems with the ADATA XPG SX950 would be mildly disappointing but reasonable. For light desktop use, the SX950's weaknesses wouldn't come into play. But given the premium pricing, the SX950's failings are unacceptable. ADATA can't beat Samsung's 850 PRO on price, let alone the Crucial BX300.

As the Crucial BX300 shows, most of this could be fixed with radically different firmware. But ADATA can't get anywhere by trying to compete directly against the BX300 and its unbelievably low pricing. Instead, ADATA should take the lessons learned from the SX950 and prepare to offer a more sensible drive when they can get their hands on Micron's second generation 3D NAND, which the Intel 545s suggests will be far faster and more able to match the Samsung 850 PRO, especially if used with Silicon Motion's newest SM2259 SATA controller. However, that would still leave ADATA competing in a very narrow segment of the SSD market, as almost all premium products are now using NVMe and focusing more on performance than endurance and warranty period.

Power Management
Comments Locked

45 Comments

View All Comments

  • menthol1979 - Monday, October 9, 2017 - link

    Oh dear God, another SSD that has absolutely no reason of existence. Really bored to see another SSD that gets pwned by 850 EVO (leave the PRO). I wonder if manufacturers actually test and benchmark their products before driving them to market.
  • Stochastic - Monday, October 9, 2017 - link

    Agreed.
  • ddriver - Monday, October 9, 2017 - link

    Sadly, very little of what humans do is because it is necessary or it makes sense.
  • Reflex - Monday, October 9, 2017 - link

    @ddriver And yet you continue posting...
  • Samus - Monday, October 9, 2017 - link

    lolz
  • ddriver - Monday, October 9, 2017 - link

    Moot point, as I don't identify with the human herd. Cattle mentality and the accompanying irrational behavioral patterns don't sit well with me. Which is also why I refer to humans in third person, a subtle nuance an intelligent person would have read into.

    But not you though, you perfectly fit the profile, seeing how once again you fail at getting stuff or making sense ;) But still, an understandable effort, you are probably still hurting by that chain of pwnage. And it's only parroting cliches because you really cannot do better.

    You humans, sometimes I am amazed you made it this far. And since you wouldn't get the nuance, there are two contexts to that, the first being that you still haven't succumb to your stupidity, and the second being "this far into devolution". I suppose that's why you cherish the establishment and its mediocrity so much, even if it is what pushes you to regress into cattle, you still get to survive, suckling at its toxic tit. It's your mommy, that's what your infant mind can identify it as, not as what it really is.
  • ddriver - Monday, October 9, 2017 - link

    And just in case you are perplexed how me responding to your post is something that makes sense, since you obviously can't get all this, it is quite simple - you are not the intended audience, just the means of making a point for the occasional few that can get it ;)
  • vgray35@hotmail.com - Tuesday, October 10, 2017 - link

    This quote "Sadly, very little of what humans do is because it is necessary or it makes sense," is a telling feature reveal of this AI Cyborg miscreant, who apparently has a deep rooted need for focusing on humans, describing humans, engaging humans, belittling humans; and it's apparent its existence and glorified self aggrandizement is defined solely on the existence lowly humans, as evidenced by the closing statement "you are not the intended audience ...".

    Sadly, very little of what this AI cyborg does makes sense. Prattle over product reviews is merely pretense of know how . Sadly no one has yet found the power down switch for this AI cyborg. For as much as it exudes disdain for humans, yet its very reason for being relies entirely on the necessity for engaging with them, to establish meaning in its miserable existence. These posts are its food, and a belittlement posture its means of self aggrandizement compensating for its low class software programming. The prattle is evidence that surely this really is no human (as it itself claims). It needs a firmware upgrade and an implant to put it out of its misery. I wish scientists would stop creating such experimental specimens for their own misguided research.
  • mapesdhs - Wednesday, October 11, 2017 - link

    vgray, that was awesome. 8)
  • svan1971 - Wednesday, October 11, 2017 - link

    Bravo !

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now