AnandTech Storage Bench - Heavy

While The Destroyer focuses on sustained and worst-case performance by hammering the drive with nearly 1TB worth of writes, the Heavy trace provides a more typical enthusiast and power user workload. By writing less to the drive, the Heavy trace doesn't drive the SSD into steady-state and thus the trace gives us a good idea of peak performance combined with some basic garbage collection routines. For full details of the test, please refer to the this article.

AnandTech Storage Bench - Heavy (Data Rate)

As the SM951 has been better optimized for typical client workloads than the SSD 750, it outperforms the Intel drive by a healthy margin. We don't really see much difference between the NVMe and AHCI versions, though, as the NVMe version has only marginally lower latency than it's AHCI sibling.

AnandTech Storage Bench - Heavy (Latency)

AnandTech Storage Bench - Heavy (Latency)

AnandTech Storage Bench - The Destroyer AnandTech Storage Bench - Light
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  • CrazyElf - Thursday, June 25, 2015 - link

    @Kristian Vättö

    Does Windows 10 have better drivers for NVMe SSDs?

    It is looking like right now that the SSD 750 might turn out to be the equal of the X-25 SSD in someday popularizing NVMe SSDs.

    That being said, for the end consumer I'm not sure it matters as much over a SATA SSD. After all, the typical average user probably values the 4k @QD1/2 above all else, so perhaps these PCI-E SSDs will remain a niche product, unless the price reaches near parity with SATA SSDs, which won't happen for at least a few years.

    The big advantage these PCI-E SSDs have is mostly sequential and for write-intensive work.
  • dgingeri - Thursday, June 25, 2015 - link

    Windows 10 is still in development. They're still trying to improve things before the release day. I'm running the 10130 build, and it has many issues. I don't think it would be wise to do any benchmarks under the current Win10 build, and may not be good even under what gets released.
  • hans_ober - Thursday, June 25, 2015 - link

    Forget performance/benchmarks, even the UI is unstable. Window manager hangs, quits app. Many issues.
  • Flunk - Thursday, June 25, 2015 - link

    Try installing the production gpu drivers. The Beta ones that are automatically installed are quite crashy because they're still working on Direct X 12 support..
  • Gigaplex - Thursday, June 25, 2015 - link

    That doesn't apply in my case as I'm using a laptop with Intel graphics that aren't capable of DX12.
  • nathanddrews - Friday, June 26, 2015 - link

    Not sure which Intel graphics you have, but I was successful just installing the current 7/8.1 64bit drivers.
  • AlenChakarov - Thursday, June 25, 2015 - link

    Huh? Windows 10 has been rock-hard stable for me for quite a while now. Considering it's shipping a month from now, that's how it should be. Is your statement up-to-date?
  • Gigaplex - Thursday, June 25, 2015 - link

    I'm running the latest build, and I get a highly visible explorer crash every time I shut down or restart.
  • Notmyusualid - Sunday, June 28, 2015 - link

    BS.

    It is full of holes.

    If there is one thing I've learned about software, if Microsoft say Beta, they really do mean it...
  • kmmatney - Thursday, June 25, 2015 - link

    Yeah - I'm running the insider preview, and I'm a bit surprised at how rough things still are. It's stable - it just that a lot of thing don't work smoothly - especially with the App store and Modern Apps. My statement is up to date.

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