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M277 | 4 years ago
The only ones disadvantaged by this change are people who constantly write >42GB which I would think are video editors. (The old version would get a speed reduction to 1500MB/s after overflowing the SLC cache (42GB), the new one goes down to 800MB/s after overflowing (115GB))
P.S.: Not defending this, just clarifying because most posters here seem to believe it's a straight up downgrade. Should also be worth noting that Samsung changed the product box, product number, firmware version and the spec sheet for this change. So they're significantly better than the others who have done similar moves. That said, I still believe that they should have called this the 971 Evo+ or something, as it's genuinely different.
[0]: https://www.techpowerup.com/286008/et-tu-samsung-samsung-too...
OneLeggedCat|4 years ago
This is yugely better than what some other SSD makers have done. ADATA for example has massively downgraded some drives, trying to sell those under the same name and part numbers as a popular good-selling drive, and done so completely silently. ADATA isn't the only one. The screaming about this situation is endless on several pc part enthusiast subreddits.
biaachmonkie|4 years ago
But no they want to benefit from the good name and customer perception of the "970 Evo Plus SSD" while selling a substantially different product under that name. That is fraudulent behavior!
belltaco|4 years ago
How can they do that without reducing the overall capacity? My understanding is that part of the MLC storage in SSDs is used as an SLC cache so that it's faster, but can store only half, one third or one fourth of the data it otherwise would.
cwizou|4 years ago
Then you have what they call "intelligent turbowrite", which is a dynamically allocated/reallocated SLC cache (about 108 GB).
For both, the concept is broadly the same, your writes go into the overprovisionned "SLC cache" first, then into the dynamic one.
When the drive is idle, it will consolidate the writes of both caches as 3 bit writes, freeing the NAND for "SLC cache" use again. This can take a few minutes of idle time.
As you fill up your disk things get more complicated, you need to keep some free space to be able to consolidate your writes, the exact way this controller works in that case is not known to me, but this is an issue with every SSD that's not full SLC. Modern controllers usually are doing much better than the old ones.
shanoaice|4 years ago
SV_BubbleTime|4 years ago
However, every SSD out there has unallocated space. This is for trim and drive write purposes.
At the mfg level, if you needed to get more space, you can. This will affect the drive rates per day (DWPD) rating of the drive.
In the server world, you can get “high endurance” drives that are 90% just under-provisioned for storage space.