Miscellaneous Aspects and Concluding Remarks

The performance of the three different Crucial X10 Pro PSSDs in various real-world access traces as well as synthetic workloads was brought out in the preceding sections. We also looked at the performance consistency for these cases. Power users may also be interested in performance consistency under worst-case conditions, as well as drive power consumption. The latter is also important when used with battery powered devices such as notebooks and smartphones. Pricing is also an important aspect. We analyze each of these in detail below.

Worst-Case Performance Consistency

Flash-based storage devices tend to slow down in unpredictable ways when subject to a large number of small-sized random writes. Many benchmarks use that scheme to pre-condition devices prior to the actual testing in order to get a worst-case representative number. Fortunately, such workloads are uncommon for direct-attached storage devices, where workloads are largely sequential in nature. Use of SLC caching as well as firmware caps to prevent overheating may cause drop in write speeds when a flash-based DAS device is subject to sustained sequential writes.

Our Sequential Writes Performance Consistency Test configures the device as a raw physical disk (after deleting configured volumes). A fio workload is set up to write sequential data to the raw drive with a block size of 128K and iodepth of 32 to cover 90% of the drive capacity. The internal temperature is recorded at either end of the workload, while the instantaneous write data rate and cumulative total write data amount are recorded at 1-second intervals.

Sequential Writes to 90% Capacity - Performance Consistency
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The 4TB version can sustain around 1600 MBps for the duration of the test, while ending up at 70C. On the other hand, the 2TB version starts out similarly but drops down to 1300 MBps after around 10 minutes. Both the 1TB and 2TB versions ended up around 65C. However, the 1TB variant dropped down from 1600 MBps to 1200 MBps within a few seconds of starting the test. The reason for this is likely to be the history of write accesses putting the controller in a rather fragile state, rather than thermal throttling.

Power Consumption

Bus-powered devices can configure themselves to operate within the power delivery constraints of the host port. While Thunderbolt ports are guaranteed to supply up to 15W for client devices, USB 2.0 ports are guaranteed to deliver only 2.5W (500mA @ 5V). In this context, it is interesting to have a fine-grained look at the power consumption profile of the various external drives. Using the ChargerLAB KM003C, the bus power consumption of the drives was tracked while processing the CrystalDiskMark workloads (separated by 5s intervals). The graphs below plot the instantaneous bus power consumption against time, while singling out the maximum and minimum power consumption numbers.

CrystalDiskMark Workloads - Power Consumption
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The average power consumption during the active stage is around 2W, compared to the 3W idling number for the best overall performer of them all - the SanDisk Extreme Pro v2. When operating with battery-powered devices, the Crucial X10 Pro is undoubtedly an excellent choice.

Final Words

The flash market is currently experiencing a supply glut, with pricing to the advantage of the consumers. Crucial launched the 4TB version of the X10 Pro at '$290, and the pricing has held steady since then. There is a slight premium over the X9 Pro, but that is only to be expected for the performance jump. At 7.25¢ / GB, the PSSD presents excellent value for money. Other capacity points come in at '$169 (8.5¢/GB) and $120 (12¢/GB) . The 1TB variant's performance consistency is not as good as expected - the 2TB and 4TB versions present a better value proposition.

The bridge-based PSSDs presented as comparison units are more of a premium offering, though we see the much-maligned SanDisk Extreme Portable v2 being priced as low as $300. From a pure performance viewpoint, it is hard to recommend against the SanDisk PSSD if the 3-2-1 backup strategy is being observed. However, the X10 Pro SKUs score in the power consumption and physical footprint aspects. Crucial is also throwing in some value-adds such as the Mylio Photos+ trial subscription into the mix. Overall performance across a variety of workloads may not favor the X10 Pro SKUs when bridge-based PSSDs are in the picture. However, for the vast majority of direct-attached storage use-cases, the performance profile, physical footprint, case design, and pricing of the 4TB and 2TB Crucial X10 Pro SKUs represent an optimal combination. The 1TB version can be recommended for entry-level use-cases, but needs to be priced a bit lower keeping its performance consistency issues in mind.

 
Performance Benchmarks
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  • timecop1818 - Friday, November 10, 2023 - link

    How come there's no internal pics? Or is the enclosure not possible to disassemble without breaking?
  • meacupla - Friday, November 10, 2023 - link

    I have an X9, and it's welded shut
  • PeachNCream - Friday, November 10, 2023 - link

    "The increasing popularity of portable SSDs has prompted almost all tier-one NAND flash manufacturers to jump into the market."

    I'm not saying its not factual, but plowing open an article with an unsupported assertion does not lend credibility to the information that follows.
  • lmcd - Saturday, November 11, 2023 - link

    dude just search usb ssd on amazon
  • PeachNCream - Friday, November 10, 2023 - link

    "Both these drives used QLC NAND, making it suitable only for mainstream consumers on a budget."

    What? Readers here generally understand the underlying technologies at play, but why is QLC NAND unsuitable for anyone other than a vague, ill-defined category of "mainstream" users? What use cases are you arguing for here? From my perspective, it looks like an amateurish attempt to add word count and fluff to a piece. Between that and the other unsupported fluff starting that paragraph, it just looks like the writing here is half-baked at best.
  • lmcd - Saturday, November 11, 2023 - link

    Its performance stinks once you get past the SLC cache. Read the full article?
  • jvl - Monday, November 13, 2023 - link

    Truth be told, one year ago I checked these and decided for a Kingston XS2000. I explicitly figured that after 230 s of writing with ~1.7 GB/s (i.e., ~390 GB) I'd be making my coffee anyway or multitask away. Besides, writing that kind of volume on what is essentially a thumbdrive, dunno, I'd prefer a NAS or network connection.

    Maybe proprietary formats demand writing bulk for creative workloads? Not my area..
  • TheinsanegamerN - Friday, December 1, 2023 - link

    Because the performance of QLC sucks massive balls? It literally hits HDD speed on anything larger then a NES game. How about atrocious cold data retention, terrible write durability, ece?
  • PeachNCream - Friday, November 10, 2023 - link

    "The performance specifications of these two products indicate suitability for power users - for the first time, the company is quoting write speeds for their PSSDs in the marketing material."

    Power users won't be okay with waiting a few seconds longer for an external drive to write data? Another ill-defined, vague categorical classification with no use cases to explain. I'm so turned off by the fuzzy writing. It's almost like this article was written by someone who had Discord open on a second screen and was splitting their attention and focus onto another task during both the draft and editing/cleanup process.
  • Dr_b_ - Saturday, December 2, 2023 - link

    I have to agree with you about the fluff, not necessarily going to savage them as bad as you are but what you are saying is correct. Having to skip/skim past the entire first part of the review to get to the substance is bad.

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