New Intel 520 Series SSD Taps SandForce Controller 72
crookedvulture writes "Intel continues to partner with third-party controller makers for high-end SSDs. Its new 520 Series drives pair the latest SandForce controller with Intel's own firmware and 25-nm NAND. HotHardware, Tech Report, and PC Perspective all have reviews of the drive, and the verdict is pretty consistent. While the Intel 520 Series offers slightly better performance than competing SandForce solutions, it also costs 30-40% more. That's a steep margin even considering the Intel SSD's five-year warranty."
Sometimes (Score:5, Interesting)
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Ad yet my X25M, which came at a steep price, is still performing well 1.5 years later while several others I know have gone through several competing drives in the same period. Anecdotal, I know, but when I decided on a drive, the only one without the kind of failure stories my colleagues went through was the Intel drive.
Sometimes you do get what you pay for.
I went for the Crucial M4 (2x256GB in RAID 0) instead of the Vertex 3 because I just didn't want to deal with the bullshit.
No idea why Intel went with a SandForce controller, though. They have a good reputation with their SSDs - why risk it?
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Maybe in a world with more fast, cheap and reliable drives, Intel can sell more high power CPUs? Or this is a move against Samsung?
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Yeah seems to me that Intel is actually helping Sandforce fix the bugs in Sandforce's product. Not for free of course, but one wonders about the long term strategic reasons for this. They could have let Sandforce keep churning out SSDs with buggy firmware.
The Anandtech article indicates that the fixed firmware will be exclusive to Intel for a certain (unspecified) period of time, before being made available to other SandForce vendors. So what Intel gets for their time and effort is a period of exclusivity
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Intel generally thinks longer term than most US IT companies.
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Yeah the x25 is a great drive, no doubt about it. It was just so expensive compared to the alternatives back then... I could have bought three competing drives for the same cost. I keep backups so drive failures aren't a huge problem (though still annoying).
Luckily though I haven't had issues with my SSD at all. A Corsair Force drive well over a year old now and still performing great. I'd heard the stories about how most SSDs seem to die quickly so I was paranoid at first, but maybe I just got one out of t
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It's BECAUSE he's tempting fate by using RAID0 that he is paranoid. RAID0 is like throwing the middle finger at fate while doing a jig.
If you were really paranoid, you would not use RAID 0. Or are you a lazy paranoid?
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I've had a lot of experience with RAID over a long time, both in the enterprise and at home. I prefer software RAID 0 for home systems. I'm currently running a software RAID 0 stripe across 4 drives for roughly a TB of fast workspace space. The remainder of those 4 drives is used as normal storage, with a fifth for backing up that RAID 0 stripe. I no longer use any other RAID for the home. I don't have uptime requirements, which is all redundant arrays are good for anyways. I use another set of external d
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> Using RAID 1 during those circumstances is like building two houses next to a volcano instead of just one.
Yep. Just ask anybody who bought a pair of OCZ Velocity2 Sandforce-based drives and mirrored them in the hope of avoiding data loss... and had both of them simultaneously commit suicide thanks to the wonderful bug that triggers the "3 minutes to deathcrash" condition (never fear, though... the drive itself is "fine" -- just Securely Erase (tm) it, and it'll be good for a few more weeks until it kil
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3-5 year support was often on offer for consumer units, 7 years for enterprise $ now too (28% over-provisionin).
Re:Sometimes (Score:4, Insightful)
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And this is where ZFS (or some other intelligent filesystem that is aware of the notion of heterogeneous storage) is going to be a win. Use spinning rust discs for the storage, and an SSD for accelerating read/write. Unfortunately neither Windows nor OS X have the facility to make use of this in most machines.
Superfetch is all well and good, but USB flash is still slow, and RAM is limited.
I'm keen to see the performance of the current/next generation of seagate hybrid drives. If they can get to some
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Windows really needs something similar to time machine. Windows backup
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Exactly, thanks smash. I mean who gives a flying fuck about the drive? but if you are working on some important term paper or business proposal and the SSD decides NOW is the time its gonna crap itself? That's when you realize that hot speed isn't worth the crazy failure rates. I mean either you have every. single. change of any note backed up or you are literally rolling the dice. try contacting them and asking about your data, they'll tell you tough luck, it isn't covered.
That's why you store your actua
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That's the problem.
If you want the new hotness in SATA3 OMGWTFBBQ speeds, you're going to risk crappy firmware. It's because the firmware writers are under pressure to deliver software so the SSD manufacturers can deliver SSDs a month earlier than the competition with their new fast SSD.
So yea
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unless the SSD delivers false 0x00000000000s or 0xffffffffffffffffs. it should never blue screen, normal HDs will never blue screen, even with lots of read errors, they just get super slow.
Yes, the drivers at the OS level are probably crap.
To deliver fast speed from one single file, is trivial, its delivering fast cached, in order, small reads queued at the rate of 50000 IOPS that can push the controller chip to its limits, and some stupid buffer overflows happen.
This is what you get with code that has f
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I think some of the SSD brands intentionally disable all access to user data once they detect a single failure, which doesn't really help. Probably very profitable for data recovery firms though.
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320 Series Bug (Score:2)
Unfortunately the Intel 320 series (really the X25-M G3) has had its own reliability issues with a nasty firmware bug that causes it to suddenly report its capacity as 8MB (causing complete data loss).
http://www.pcworld.com/businesscenter/article/236468/intel_acknowledges_ssd_320_bug_working_on_firmware_upgrade.ht [pcworld.com]
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It sounds like you are trying to convince everyone, including yourself, that you were better off to choose a G2 over a G3.
There is no merit to your argument. The G3 bug you mentioned was real but it was fixed by Intel's firmware update, which is why you haven't heard anything about it.
There is nothing wrong with the G3 that would suggest that the G2 is a more reliable option. There is little to recommend the G3 over the G2 either, except price and availability.
I personally own two G2's, one G3, a real old
besides fake GIG sizes advertized (Score:1)
ie the 120G is really a 115G as reported by windows
formated its down to 106 Gb
yeah 100% false fake advertising.
How can they get away with it, a 120 is really a 115, if its 120 in hardware, but appears as 115, its still 115.
Im sure real 128G SSDs have a few hidden Gig as reserve, but its not advertised as a 135G.
Lucky I only used 60 out of the 120 (115) ((106))
My 16G Toshiba Key says 8MB (Score:1)
'Same bug' happened to my 16G Toshiba - generic - no fancy name. After 3 weeks of 12/24 usage, fail, no data, no files, says 8MB.
POS CRUD
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Intel has not acknowledged any problems with the fix, nor told anyone which serial numbers were affected. Nobody has reported on the bug since Intel said they fixed it, including Anand.
Anandtech has a decidedly pro-Intel leaning in general. If memory serves me correctly they only reported on the problem at all once every other site had done so, and even then only because their readers were giving them hell for failing to report on the fact that drives Anandtech had recommended were failing en-masse and eating people's data.
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I have been running flawlessly now for a year on a non intel drive.
I value warranties (Score:5, Interesting)
.
I get really worried when the warranty is so short, I would be extremely frustrated if the thing conked out the day after. Whereas after 5 years, I would probably be ready to move on.
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I think i've posted this before, but in Australia the laws have changed wrt warranty. If you purchased something of "significant value" and it broke after 18 months when you would reasonably expect it to last for longer (eg you bought a laptop for $500 and it failed after 18 months) then the fact that it only came with a 1 year warranty doesn't amount to anything from a legal point of view - the place you bought it from has to provide a repair or replacement.
Hopefully this will stop stores selling crappy me
price comparisons depend on the capacity (Score:2)
I noticed the price comparisons with other SF drives differ GREATLY depending on the capacity of the SSD you're looking at. When checking the 120GB version, the price difference isn't that bad, and if you're using it as a boot drive (as I hope you are), then the peace of mind seems well worth the extra money. Amazon has the 120GB version for around $230 or so.
Hopefully it's more reliable (Score:5, Informative)
I just returned an OCZ Agility 3 due to it dying after 2 weeks of light use as my Linux root partition running XFS. Since their office was local I drove it there to save shipping charges and had to laugh in their lobby since they're touting reliability. Sadly Sandforce has gained a reputation for not being the most reliable controller out there. I have never had a hard drive fail except after years of use until this one died. Fortunately it's being replaced under warranty.
Also, unlike other drives I've had fail, this one died suddenly and completely. Suddenly Linux couldn't access the root filesystem and after rebooting the drive could not be found by the SATA controller. Fortunately I had my old Western Digital Velociraptor drive I had replaced so I swapped that back in.
I have another Sandforce SSD that would often not show up when my computer woke up from standby until after a firmware update. Intel might be better, having written their own firmware, but at this point I think SSDs have a way to go in terms of reliability. There's no excuse for the issues that have been reported with the various Sandforce drives. The problem is either insufficient Q/A testing of the firmware or management pushing out the firmware before it's ready. It's also possible that there might be some hardware glitch causing these drives to fail.
-Aaron
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Forget OCZ, they might look like the best performers on paper but they have woeful reliabilitiy rates. Even the non-intel competitors such as Crucial, Corsair, GSkill etc. are much better than OCZ in reliability stakes.
The Reason I Buy Intel SSDs . . . (Score:1)
The problem is that sequential numbers are always faster and therefore easier to market to people who don't know any better. The
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You really should read something, anything before bothering to spend the time to post.
The 520 is faster at every metric (random read/write and sequential read/write) than the Intel controller based drives.
It also had a full year of vetting by Intel before being released, and they are putting the same 5 year warranty as their other drives; there is no reason to believe that it will not be as reliable as Intel controller based drives.
The only thing that doesn't compare favorably with this drive is the price.
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ocz agility 3 - mac osx - 5 mo. use without problem and even though i haven't passed the early failure window im tossing in the datapoint. *IF* it fails (i feel i trust it, but hey) i'll be here to bitch about it in the future :-) Rarely hear from the happy ones, i've found... i wonder what the failure rate really is?
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Heavy usage, we're talking about 12 hours or more monday-friday. A couple of hours on Saturdays and Sundays.
It's not my only drive though, data is stored on an HDD which replaced the DVD unit.
Same Story with me (Score:2)
I love how they state on their website that the mean time for failure is something like 130 years.
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> I love how they state on their website that the mean time for failure is something like 130 years.
Oh, that's because the hardware ITSELF will last for 130 years. The half-life of any data you STORE on it is about 7 weeks. If the offices of both Sandforce and OCZ were replaced by smoldering nuclear craters tomorrow morning, I'd smile and say, "at least they can't screw anybody else now" (well, once the remaining inventory stocked by Amazon & Newegg was gone).
Samsung SSD 830 is also a good choice. (Score:3)
When I bought my 2nd SSD a few weeks ago (first was an M4 for my laptop, this being for my desktop), I opted for a 128GB Samsung SSD 830. It's a great little drive, and was ~30% cheaper than Intel SSD 510.
I went for the 830 over a Sandforce-based drive because of their reliability. There's a reason why Apple use Samsung SSDs in their laptops.
Re:Samsung SSD 830 is also a good choice. (Score:5, Informative)
When I bought my 2nd SSD a few weeks ago (first was an M4 for my laptop, this being for my desktop), I opted for a 128GB Samsung SSD 830. It's a great little drive, and was ~30% cheaper than Intel SSD 510.
I went for the 830 over a Sandforce-based drive because of their reliability. There's a reason why Apple use Samsung SSDs in their laptops.
Intel care more about reliability than anyone else in the SSD game and they are now using the exact same sandforce controller (SF-2200) in this new drive that others have been using for a while now (OCZ Vertex 3 for example). The problems in the past were more with the firmware than the controllers.
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That's great. But when I was in the market for an SSD, their were three options: M4, Samsung or a Sandforce. Intel was more expensive, and the SandForce SSDs had reliability issues. Samsung SSDs have a great track record for reliability too
Anandtech: [anandtech.com]
Samsung is a dangerous competitor in the SSD space. Not only does it make its own controller, DRAM and NAND, but it also has an incredible track record in terms of reliability It's also worth pointing out that Samsung SSDs are also one of the two options Apple rebrands and delivers in its Mac lineup. To continue to hold on to Apple's business for this long is an impressive feat on Samsung's part.
It's amazing to see Samsung come so far in the enthusiast space. From a drive that I simply wouldn't recommend to building a downright competitive solution backed by a near flawless track record.
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Implying that SSDs are equal because they use the same controller is like saying a Apple iMac and a Dell are the same because they use the same CPU.
The firmware that runs on the SSD is highly unlikely to be the same on Intel branded drives compared to OCZ branded drives. And firmware is what is a leading cause of reliability issues on SSDs.
Pfft Sandforce (Score:4, Informative)
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warranty math (Score:2)
2 extra years warranty 3/5. So you would expect to pay 60% more.
So if you were just buying a warranty alone the price would be worth it especially since the summary states you're only paying 30%-40% more.
Add the fact that your buying from a top quality manufacturer is just icing on the cake.
Note the fact that HDD manfs have cut their standard warranty to 1 year, should show you what crap they are producing these days. Swapping hardware take
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standby / wakup issues (Score:2)
Besides, the well known reliably issues with SF controllers, i wonder if they fixed the resume problems that seem to crop up on a regular basis. The forums are full of people (including one of my machines) reporting their machines simply blue screen with some fairly high frequency when resuming with these drives. The problems seem to cross vendors too...
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No, that problem has not been fixed, and won't be fixed until Sandforce learns how to design semiconductors.
The problem is that the controller is latching up, evidenced by the fact that the supply current goes through the roof on resume.
Numonyx (Score:2)
Question - Intel had spun of their flash memory unit to merge w/ STM's flash memory unit (Intel's unit had only NOR flash, while STM had both NOR & NAND) into a company called Numonyx. That company was later acquired by Micron, which now makes all types of flash memory.
So I understand Intel making SSD controllers, but Intel makes NAND flash and SSD as well? Those things are commodity to begin w/, even more so than Numonyx's StrataFlash was, so if Intel had spun them off, why are they playing in this