Finding The Best Sub-$25 SSD (Adata, Inland, Lexar, Silicon Power)

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  • čas přidán 7. 07. 2024
  • *A Kingston A400 follow up is coming! Stay tuned! *
    I use a lot of 128GB SSDs for small projects and budget builds. I've never put much thought into which ones I use though, so I decided to test some out to see what works best.
    Link to results:
    docs.google.com/spreadsheets/...
    ---------------------------------------------------
    Timestamps:
    0:00 Intro
    0:34 Specs
    2:55 Disclaimer
    4:21 Methodology
    4:52 Crystal Disk Mark Results pt. 1
    8:37 Windows Boot Times
    9:22 Crystal Disk Mark Results pt. 2
    11:47 Final Thoughts
    ---------------------------------------------------
    Music (in order):
    "If You Want To" - Me
    "Voodoo Groovez" - GARRISON ( / garrison-brown )
    "The Butterfly Nose" - GARRISON
    "Crenshaw Vibes" - GARRISON
    "Hardware Haven Theme" - Me
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 491

  • @poromise
    @poromise Před 2 lety +256

    This is kind of a previously unfulfilled niche of content, in depth and quality reviews and tips centered around actually low cost gear with good production quality. Many channels either pass on the cheap stuff altogether, or they have terrible video and audio, no script, and rarely give you any more information than what it says on the packaging.

    • @HardwareHaven
      @HardwareHaven  Před 2 lety +20

      Yeah I sort of agree. I really just wanted to start making the videos I wanted to see and I guess this is what happened. Thanks for the comment!

    • @henryquinn1795
      @henryquinn1795 Před 2 lety

      You might also like Oz Talks HW.

    • @InkWok
      @InkWok Před rokem

      really cool insight, subbed immediately. such good vibes

  • @JayVBear45
    @JayVBear45 Před 2 lety +12

    Like your honesty. I've been building PC systems for about 26 years now but I really don't know a lot of computer/tech engineering stuff except for the absolute basics - yup, I'm still a hobbyist. My first computer was an Amiga 500 and I learned how to modify it with LOTS of help from user groups, BBSs and IRC channels. CZcams wasn't a thing yet back then. Later when I really wanted to build my own PC, I took a PC Repair correspondence course, read a beginner's guide on building PCs and made friends with a local computer repair shop owner who helped me pick my components for my first build and steer me towards resources I would never had thought of - dumpsters outside of other computer repair shops known to throw out older yet completely good parts such as slightly outdated monitors, cables, brackets etc. I bought ALL my major necessary parts new from my friend and he stood by me every step of the way till my PC was up and running. He was honest like you. He was a former electrical engineer and computer specialist for our local major university but was always patient and kind, humble to a fault. Now after 15 odd builds I'm still itching for my next, new build. Thanks for being here and providing good, thought provoking content.

  • @kieronyin8194
    @kieronyin8194 Před 2 lety +136

    Well done! Thoroughly informative as well as entertaining with a great video atmosphere overall. Its important to note that the existence of a DRAM cache (as in the Adata drive) will increase the longevity of the SSD, as it reduces the overall wear of the flash memory cells. I look forward to seeing this channel grow, keep up the great work!

    • @HardwareHaven
      @HardwareHaven  Před 2 lety +16

      Yes! Dang it I meant to say that in the video 🤦🏻‍♂️
      Thanks for adding that as well as for the encouragement

    • @MaxUgly
      @MaxUgly Před 2 lety +6

      I love Adata drives! So much bang for the buck, always my go to when trying to go cheap.

    • @brokeandtired
      @brokeandtired Před 2 lety +2

      @@HardwareHaven I use a 128gb SSD because my PC is just being used to play media and for use as a general usage PC. Its a rebuilt i5 3470 from my older scrapped PC. I sold my i5 10400 PC during the GPU gouge wars...Because I gave up and got a Series S while waiting. My older PC is good enough as a streaming media/basic use PC and I don't need more than a 128gb SSD for this.

  • @mangosfx
    @mangosfx Před 2 lety +26

    You and your channel are absolutely going places, without a doubt, dude. Simply fantastic stuff!

  • @jeremycarroll978
    @jeremycarroll978 Před 2 lety +22

    Dude, fantastic work here brother. As someone who does video editing and has published content to youtube occasionally on another channel, I know the amount of work that went into this entire project. It shows your dedication to your passion and perseverance towards your craft. Keep up the work man! Looking forward to what comes next!

    • @HardwareHaven
      @HardwareHaven  Před 2 lety

      😭 It really does take forever, especially being an amateur editor haha!
      Thanks so much for the encouragement

  • @ntgm20
    @ntgm20 Před 2 lety +15

    Thanks for the data, and a good video. I've used mainly Kingston small SSDs, and agree that they are great for making an older system feel more usable without much cost involved. I also use them as OS drives in home servers, where even after years of updates they use less an 10GB.

  • @sillystev0n
    @sillystev0n Před 2 lety +15

    I work on old computers all the time and I love these smaller capacity ssds due to the cost/performance and the fact that most of my clients don’t do many local tasks now a days as most applications just need a web browser.
    Also great video! Love the editing style!

  • @quentinbrown4117
    @quentinbrown4117 Před 2 lety +1

    This is the first time one of your videos has shown up on my YT homepage. Nice production value and worthwhile content for the layman/casual user. Good luck with your channel.

  • @geezergeek1637
    @geezergeek1637 Před rokem +4

    I had a A400 brick after short use. There are methods to try to unbrick them, but I did not pursue it. It soured me on this part of the Kingston lineup. Thanks for the testing. Your method seemed reasonable to me.

  • @Gamepalooza
    @Gamepalooza Před 2 lety

    I use a lot of smaller SSDs in project similar to what you described. Appreciated this vid. Thanks so much.

  • @TCGView
    @TCGView Před 2 lety +4

    These smaller SSDs definitely still have their place. I recently got one and use it as a boot drive for my TrueNAS box. I am also thinking of getting another to replace the old mechanical HD in an old laptop to give it some extra life. Since I only use that laptop for business related stuff like writing proposals, posting things online, etc. it works perfectly.

    • @wahidpawana424
      @wahidpawana424 Před 2 lety

      I use those smaller ssds for caching since i have primocache. For the same price as a 1tb ssd i could get a much higher capacity drive hdd with some extra cash. And i wouldn't be losing sleep over 3 seconds of slower load speed for gaming.

  • @davidg5898
    @davidg5898 Před 2 lety +56

    Lower capacity SSDs are incredibly useful! I plop them into all kinds of systems.
    And these SSDs are so friggin' cheap! My last pizza delivery cost more than an SSD, and the pizza didn't last anywhere near as long.
    Good experiment, BTW. I've been using ADATA exclusively for my small capacity drive needs.

    • @samuelmatheson9655
      @samuelmatheson9655 Před 2 lety +8

      lmao you can't eat the ssd

    • @funfever8484
      @funfever8484 Před rokem +6

      SSD is for pc
      and pizza for your stomach
      no connection at all
      ADATA or what ever it is just no more salt.

    • @typingcat
      @typingcat Před rokem +4

      Yeah, but what kind of pizza?

    • @velazquezruedaomar3530
      @velazquezruedaomar3530 Před rokem +1

      Long live $7 bucks pizza

    • @ShawnFX
      @ShawnFX Před rokem +2

      Can't believe someone compared a Sata SSD to a pizza😂 but wonderful David!

  • @gsmith7162
    @gsmith7162 Před 2 lety +1

    Awesome video, keep them coming!

  • @Mineav
    @Mineav Před 2 lety +3

    SSDs are such cool technology. I love watching any videos on them.

  • @livinglegend2106
    @livinglegend2106 Před rokem

    This guy is awesome cos he legit goes about his videos with the research process in mind very simple explanations leading up to a comprehensive analysis explanation. This guy is awesome please don't change. I like his process of explanation he doesn't talk too fast and that helps with comprehension
    Keep the good work flowing dude

  • @Murkymaid
    @Murkymaid Před 2 lety +4

    your editing is great
    hope you get more subs cause you deserve them :)

  • @twiceshy6226
    @twiceshy6226 Před 2 lety +2

    For Servers, Raspbery Pis and many other scenarios the cheap 120GB 2.5" SSDs are more than sufficient, I have roughly 8 of these SSDs laying around and in use. Great Review thanks a lot, was fun to watch.

  • @johnknightiii1351
    @johnknightiii1351 Před 2 lety +10

    In reality even when the sp drive is at high capacity and is running slower, it is substantially faster then a mechanical drive. I've used 6 of them so far with no problems.

  • @dandewhurst8916
    @dandewhurst8916 Před 2 lety +2

    Just come across this channel and the content is superb! I personally like the silicone power drives.

  • @ovarb12
    @ovarb12 Před 2 lety +2

    I do tons of pc and laptop upgrades. Ppl don't need or want to spend for bigger hd. This waa something i always wanted to do. I use Kingston because you can always get them and its a name brand. Way to go on being honest. Doing videos and things like this is how you learn.

  • @kattz753
    @kattz753 Před 2 lety +2

    I have several Adata and Silicon Power drives in various sizes. They might not be the fastest out there but they have been reliable.As I have upgraded, I put them into external USB cases. They're handy to keep around

  • @stormwager9340
    @stormwager9340 Před 2 lety +7

    I find ssd and the technology behind it interesting so that’s why I have a couple of MLC enterprise grade ssds, one of them has a 1.65TB capacity (pcie 4x) and a rated TBW of 9PBW! I got lucky and it was at 93% health so it is great for a storage drive (no nvme). In case you’re wondering, it is the Fusion-io scale2 pcie ssd (1.65tb)

    • @bhoot1702
      @bhoot1702 Před 2 lety

      Wtf 9PBW!!!!

    • @stormwager9340
      @stormwager9340 Před 2 lety

      @@bhoot1702 Yup. Came with its own software too, well, I had to scour the web for the software. If you run it through any standard disk utility (without formatting it) it will say all the sectors are bad...scared me real good. You have to have the VSL installed for the drive to be recognized by the system so its not as convenient as NVMe. Runs to the high 80s (celsius) if you don't have enough cooling. Guess that's how you know its some server grade stuff.

  • @0tiochico
    @0tiochico Před 2 lety +1

    Amazing content in this video and the channel overall. Also, a video like this but concerning RAM, GPUs and CPU would be amazing for people building it's own rigs.

  • @tropicalgeek2787
    @tropicalgeek2787 Před 2 lety

    Glad you didn't include the PNY CS900, I've seen first hand major inconstant results in their SSDs. Cool video!

  • @ferfromla
    @ferfromla Před 2 lety +6

    Great video and beneficial information. I like to use these cheapos to test Linux distros on a real drive before committing to a larger drive for a complete system. I like doing that better than a virtual drive, as I can see what real hardware will do on a system. Concerning my experience, I can echo your findings with ADATA, which I think is worth the extra $4. I have also had a good experience with the Silicone Power. I have recently purchased some Inland drives, but it is too soon to render a judgment, and I have only used a Lexar once, so that one I also don't have enough experience with to give an opinion. I like having some of these cheaper drives on hand as people will sometimes give me their old Windows 7 computers which I can recondition with Linux and give to kids and people who just need something to use for everyday computing. It saves these old machines from being thrown in the trash, and putting in a cheap SSD gives them more power than a Chromebook.

  • @lgzy3
    @lgzy3 Před 2 lety +46

    A little sad to see the Kingston A400 couldn't make the list. I've used 5 of the 240GB model in several PC builds for friends and myself. I've only just upgraded to an nvme boot drive after 2 years. Great video again

    • @HardwareHaven
      @HardwareHaven  Před 2 lety +9

      Yeah I kinda regret not waiting for a return. Had their return policy been more flexible, I probably would have

    • @protoman-yj3ev
      @protoman-yj3ev Před 2 lety

      even i use the same model 240 gb ssd drive

    • @ikbintom
      @ikbintom Před 2 lety +2

      Same for me! Worked great for many years before I switched to nvme two a month ago

    • @farmeunit
      @farmeunit Před 2 lety +6

      We have about 400 at work and haven’t had one die yet.

    • @budmonk2819
      @budmonk2819 Před 2 lety

      Indeed, I think you should add those results in a new video. Great fan of the Kingston.

  • @NeoKayos
    @NeoKayos Před 2 lety +1

    Banger. Best vid so far. Keep it up.

    • @HardwareHaven
      @HardwareHaven  Před 2 lety

      I was honestly really nervous about this one. Thanks!

  • @LBSiUK
    @LBSiUK Před 2 lety

    Absolutely fantastic video! Once I had finished the video I checked your sub count and my god was I surprised. You deserve a lot more! You've earned a sub from me, well done!

    • @HardwareHaven
      @HardwareHaven  Před 2 lety +1

      Wow, thank you! I appreciate it, but I'm already blown away by the support I've received in the last few months. It's crazy to me haha

  • @EweToobUsername
    @EweToobUsername Před 2 lety +6

    I’m a huge fan of the Inland drives and they’re my go-tos when it comes to laptop hard drive replacement and rebuilding old office computers.
    Fun fact - add an ATA to SATA adapter to your XP-based Pentium III, Pentium 4, or Athlon that lacks SATA and you’ll get performance out of your machine you won’t believe.

    • @DFX2KX
      @DFX2KX Před 2 lety

      considering that the more common conversion uses CompactFlash and that's both slow and expensive, you're right. There are other specialized adapters that'll let you bolt a sata drive into even older stuff with various caveats as well.

    • @PainterVierax
      @PainterVierax Před 2 lety

      My Socket A motherboard already had Sata on it so it might be better for P4 or Athlon/Sempron owner to find a better motherboard instead of trashy converters.

  • @justinchampion5468
    @justinchampion5468 Před 2 lety +1

    This was a decent primer on the bargin-basement tier! Have a sub! :)

  • @reubenjoshbonifacio6882
    @reubenjoshbonifacio6882 Před rokem +1

    Nice review. Your voice is something man !

  • @udshehan4794
    @udshehan4794 Před 8 měsíci

    Really great video man 🔥🔥👍👍

  • @BryantAvant
    @BryantAvant Před 2 lety +7

    I've put around 500 silicon powers in customer computers. Always a great upgrade to keep 4-10 year old computers moving at almost the same speed as new computers.

    • @syarifairlangga4608
      @syarifairlangga4608 Před 2 lety

      How abou Adata and PNY?
      Have u had experience with it

    • @BryantAvant
      @BryantAvant Před 2 lety

      @@syarifairlangga4608 I use adata sx8200 pro nvme's. They're good value for the speed. So far so good but I've only been using them for at most just over two years.

  • @johncate9541
    @johncate9541 Před 2 lety

    Glad to see these results. I always buy Adata for cheap SSDs. I bought one Silicon Power when they were on sale at Newegg a year ago and it was fine, but Adata is my go-to. Always had good results with them.

    • @ZverseZ
      @ZverseZ Před rokem

      I just got one from Amazon but I was worried since it has fast read/write speeds like a dram ssd, it might be pushing limits and die quickly. I hope it lasts more than a year fingers crossed

  • @212days
    @212days Před 2 lety +15

    It's amazing that you can buy those things so cheap these days. I remember when they first came out and were the new "big thing" in computers. I think at that time I bought a 32GB hard drive for like $70 or something. 128GB was like the max size you could buy and they were like $300 or something. I don't remember the exact prices but something like that.

    • @colorxproductions5228
      @colorxproductions5228 Před 2 lety

      wow. time fly's by so fast

    • @bickyboo7789
      @bickyboo7789 Před rokem

      4TB ones are $300 now. How awesome is that?

    • @212days
      @212days Před rokem +1

      @@bickyboo7789 Wow that is amazing. I didn't even know they made them in that size. Back when SSD's first came out I don't think they even made mechanical hard drives in that size. 2TB was about the max in those days. My dad tells the story about buying a basic calculator for $300 when calculators first came out. Now days you can buy them for $5 at the local CVS.

    • @sategllib2191
      @sategllib2191 Před rokem

      ​@212days you can find 4tb for $220 now

    • @pochul
      @pochul Před rokem +1

      @@212days 8 tb for 400 $ now

  • @MyNameIsBucket
    @MyNameIsBucket Před 2 lety +3

    I've been using Inland SSDs for years. Though I've hardly been thrashing them, they last just fine.

  • @MrBram85
    @MrBram85 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for all the hard work

  • @bangdollarsign
    @bangdollarsign Před 5 měsíci

    Thanks for doing this!

  • @kparserpcs6699
    @kparserpcs6699 Před 2 lety

    Dude your videos are so high quality

  • @relaxingnature2617
    @relaxingnature2617 Před rokem +1

    It's nice to see videos about sata ssd's ..most channels only talk about nvme

  • @fantv525
    @fantv525 Před rokem +1

    Thanks for this very useful video.

  • @luigibellantoni6828
    @luigibellantoni6828 Před 2 lety

    Installed a few silicon power SSD in a few builds. No issues after a few year.
    I will look into the adata in the future for sure.

  • @bertnijhof5413
    @bertnijhof5413 Před 2 lety +3

    I have the Silicon Power A55 but the size is 128GB, in that additional 8GB I can store my OS Ubuntu. I used it for some time as boot drive and now I use it as SSD cache for my HDDs. I have it now for 4 or 5 years and I never had any complaint.

  • @ZverseZ
    @ZverseZ Před rokem +1

    What a beautiful video, I wish more people would cover budget pc computer parts so we finally know who the reliable cheap brands are, however I know these videos are expensive so bigger channels need to step up too

  • @NottsBobUK
    @NottsBobUK Před 2 lety

    Great video, very informative. Thank you for posting it.

  • @TheReid2DecoderTech
    @TheReid2DecoderTech Před 2 lety +5

    I've had my Adata SU800 128GB SSD for almost 5yrs now and still kicking in life, back then ssd's were more expensive than now but it was the best investment I've ever made.

    • @WTI00
      @WTI00 Před rokem

      Is the performance still the same as you bought it initially and is the one you get on aliexpress the original product?

  • @coolraul07
    @coolraul07 Před rokem +2

    New subber; loving your content.
    Suggestion for next time: take note of each drive's warranty and TBW (TB written) rating. SSD cells have a limit to the # of times they can be written to, so that affects its usuable lifespan. Warranty is often tied to this (e.g., x years or ### TBW, whichever comes first).
    I have found similarly priced SSDs (and M.2 NVMe) with similar advertised specs that vary significantly with warranty and TBW. For example, some had 5 yr warranty and a TBW of 200 times to drive's size, yet another brand had 3 yr and a TBW of 600x drive size. This definitely influenced my purchasing decisions based on use case.

  • @dany_cool9092
    @dany_cool9092 Před 2 lety

    Love ur content! Keep it up!

  • @sebastian19745
    @sebastian19745 Před 2 lety +2

    My first SSD was a ADATA and the second one was Kingston. Both were 32G, that was a good size back then. The Kingston started to wear (long boot times, random BSOD) after not even 6 moths under Windows 7, (8GDDR3, core I5 laptop) and swapped it with a mechanical HDD. ADATA was keeping up very well under Windows XP (some Intel dual core with 2G DDR2) and after almost one year installed Slackware on it. It still works like a champ today, after more than 10 years. The Kingston one, died under Linux completely; I don't used swap partition on either SSD.
    Since then, my go-to brand of SSD is ADATA.
    I tried Kingston some time ago and again, it failed, while ADATA showed no wear on the same PC under the same conditions. I don't know, maybe I had bad luck?

  • @suryabejibun
    @suryabejibun Před 2 lety +1

    Nice content delivery

  • @xif_loyola
    @xif_loyola Před 2 lety +5

    here in indonesia, our "budget" 128gb SSD choices are priced at around 15$, with many brands you will never heard of, like RX7, NCT, valuetech, flyjiie, kingsmax and there are still more of em. maybe more comparison vs those legit brands like the above will be cool

    • @DFX2KX
      @DFX2KX Před 2 lety

      kingsmax is the only brand I've actually seen online here. They also make SD cards If I recall right. Never bought one, though.

  • @UVClay
    @UVClay Před 2 lety +1

    I've used cheap SP, TEAMGROUP, Lexar, and Inland SSDs in my desktops and, more specifically, in my servers. The only drives I've consistently had bad results with are the Lexars. The two that I had both died within 6 months and were basically only used to house the OS on my NAS. I think the final totals were less than 100 gigs written and maybe 1100 hours of being powered on when I chucked em. I replaced them with two TEAMGROUP drives and never once had another issue. I've honestly lost count at how many SP drives I have, some NVMe most SATA, and I've never had any issues with reliability. The only bad SP drive I've dealt with just needed a firmware update, which was actively noted on their support site when I visited the page for the drive I had to resolve the issue I was having, and that was 2 or 3 years ago at this point.

  • @NatesRandomVideo
    @NatesRandomVideo Před 2 lety

    Nice work. Definitely need a follow-up with the Kingston.

  • @TheSlyMouse
    @TheSlyMouse Před 2 lety

    Wholesome SSD content.

  • @jnb756
    @jnb756 Před 2 lety +3

    These 128gb drives are awesome as an external boot drive when paired up with Ventoy. I literally can boot from any of 12 different ISO files and there is plenty of room to add more. This comes in handy when installing Windows 10, 11 Server 2012, 2019 etc... At the same time I have multiple Linux distros at my fingertips to check out as a live version and can install to another drive in a system at will. I am not affiliated with Ventoy - I just love the software and you should check it out if you get a chance

    • @patricktrakzel9657
      @patricktrakzel9657 Před 2 lety

      I use Ventoy on a 32 GB stick and have more than 8 iso's on it. Handy for repair, recovery or just plain installing an OS. Love it as well. Add/remove iso's in minutes.

  • @CarlosGomez-vt9pk
    @CarlosGomez-vt9pk Před 2 lety +1

    Fantastic video. Microcenter has Inland 128 and 240 GB SSDs, so I have quite a few of those for linux experiments and such. No failures yet, but I don't torture them either.

    • @HardwareHaven
      @HardwareHaven  Před 2 lety +1

      Man I’m so jealous if you micro center folk, haha! Thanks for the comment

  • @TheCocoaDaddy
    @TheCocoaDaddy Před 2 lety +1

    Great video! I've seen the ADATA drives for sale but never decided to try one. I've installed several Silicon Power 512GB and 1TB drives and they've worked well. I'll try out an ADATA drive and see how well it works. :) Thanks for posting!

    • @HardwareHaven
      @HardwareHaven  Před 2 lety

      Glad you enjoyed! Just a heads up that I have a Kingston A400 review coming up, and I'm looking into the ADATA SU800 even more in that video.

    • @TheCocoaDaddy
      @TheCocoaDaddy Před 2 lety +1

      @@HardwareHaven Sounds good. Quick question: when you used CloneZilla to clone the Windows installation, did you do a normal Windows installation on one of the SSDs and then use CloneZilla to clone that to the other SSDs? Thanks!

    • @HardwareHaven
      @HardwareHaven  Před 2 lety

      @@TheCocoaDaddy Good question, yes.

  • @msthalamus2172
    @msthalamus2172 Před 2 lety

    I love tiny disks like these. I use them in my main machine in much the same way I used floppies in the 90s (via IcyDocks) and also as system disks for legacy gaming rigs (via IcyDocs & SATA to IDE adapters). Inexpensive and perfect for these use cases. :)

  • @repairman2be250
    @repairman2be250 Před 2 lety

    I use smaller SSD drives in my Dell R720 Server's for boot OS. Replaced the DVD/CD drive with a caddy type that hold an SSD drive and boot from it. Works like a treat.

  • @dominick253
    @dominick253 Před 11 měsíci +1

    I have four of the Kingston drives. Two 120, one 240 and a 500gb. All work great for years. For the price they're hard to beat. But I'll try an adata next time. Dram would help a lot with big files.

  • @NightMotorcyclist
    @NightMotorcyclist Před 2 lety

    The Inland brand SSD has done me well in the past few years while brands like SanDisk have failed on me months after purchasing and getting an RMA was a pain in the arse. I've bought high performance Inland NVMe drives that have high endurance and moderate speeds for both Gen 3 (Premium) and Gen4 (Perform) and both have onboard cache at lower prices than those of Samsung. The Gen 3 drive has been in my system for about 2 years now and going strong despite my PC being on for more than 10 hours a day with quite a few instances of 24 hour operation. A really good buy if you live near a Micro Center store.

  • @XanderRowlet
    @XanderRowlet Před 2 lety +2

    Looking forward to the results, I need an SSD for my OG Xbox and I don’t wanna spend 50 bucks just for a console mod

  • @junaidfaiz
    @junaidfaiz Před 2 lety

    Superb reciew

  • @cris3758
    @cris3758 Před 4 měsíci

    Really useful video. Thx!

  • @JonnyRecaps
    @JonnyRecaps Před 10 měsíci

    Brilliant video.

  •  Před 2 lety +2

    Great video. It would be nice to see their TBW though. Nearly all the TBW tests usually run for high capacity well-known brands.

    • @HardwareHaven
      @HardwareHaven  Před 2 lety +1

      Are you asking to test that or just to list the manufacturer’s info?

    •  Před 2 lety

      @@HardwareHaven I was talking about testing that without knowing if it is an easy task or not:)

    • @HardwareHaven
      @HardwareHaven  Před 2 lety +1

      I could TOTALLY be wrong here, but I think the only real way to test that would be to have a bunch of them, run them until they start to fail, and then generate averages. It would be awesome if I could do that, but I doubt it haha

  • @kazriko
    @kazriko Před 2 lety +1

    I use plenty of 120-256gb drives in small projects here. For example, to try out different OSes on laptops. I also use a 120gig for my pfsense firewall, they'd probably be great for a HTPC as well if you're just streaming video and audio from a NAS. A 120gig would probably be overkill for something like ArcaOS or Haiku too.

  • @Alan-rt3se
    @Alan-rt3se Před 9 měsíci +5

    I bought four of the Silicon Power A55 SSDs, and each of them suffered a drastic reduction in write speed after less than 3 months' use. Initially, they worked fine, with Crystal DiskMark scores very similar to your report. The read and write speeds were around 400 MB/s. But after 3 months or so, the write speeds were under 100 MB/s. A couple of them had write speeds of around 15 MB/s, significantly slower than a hard drive. I was using these drives as storage, not the boot drive, and what apparently triggered the slowdown was when I copied the entire contents of a different drive to the SP all at once. The file transfer went well for the first 300 GB or so, then drastically slowed down. Afterwards, I tried deleting the partition and re-formatting the drive, but the write slowdown did not change, even when the drive was empty. The large file transfer appears to have permanently damaged the drive's write speed. I've done similar large file transfers using other brands of SSD and not had this problem with any other brand. I do not recommend the SP A55 drives.

    • @DillyDally69
      @DillyDally69 Před 8 měsíci +2

      Mine just died last night after around 6 months of use, overall i wouldn't recommend getting it.

    • @JamesTsividis
      @JamesTsividis Před 8 měsíci

      So using the drive killed it.

    • @Alan-rt3se
      @Alan-rt3se Před 8 měsíci

      @@JamesTsividis Yes, it seemed like using the drive is what slowed it down. One of them slowed down after I copied about 500 GB from a smaller drive that I was replacing. I'm no computer expert, but I've had many other SSDs from different brands, and these Silicon Power A55's are the only ones I've ever had slow down like that.

    • @thecorn2299
      @thecorn2299 Před 5 měsíci

      @@DillyDally69 Similar deal but it only took 3 months. RMA service required paying to send it all the way to Taiwan which does not make a lot of sense cost-wise. It would probably be better to get a cheap drive that at least has RMA service in the same country.

    • @DillyDally69
      @DillyDally69 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Feels like they purposefully made the RMA process difficult to avoid refunding customers.

  • @Brocollipy
    @Brocollipy Před 2 lety

    Really interesting. Thanks for sharing 👍👍

  • @patrickdulfo7792
    @patrickdulfo7792 Před 2 lety +1

    Adata is a good brand, thank you for testing it for me before I buy it

  • @kztech1319
    @kztech1319 Před 2 lety +2

    Great video! Though have you also tried a comparison with used but high health with DRAM and with high end brands (Samsung Intel Crucial/Micron Hynix)? I know that test would be much harder to run but I tend to lean towards those used drives than these brand new ones, especially because there is a selling tax for new items here, which makes the used products much more appealing.
    Those old high end SSDs also come in metal casing instead of plastic (The Kingston is the only one with metal casing I believe), which should help more in terms of cooling and longevity, despite the SSDs being older.

  • @vedantagrawal9530
    @vedantagrawal9530 Před 2 lety +3

    First of all, I love the Intro POST splash screen.
    Also, when my grandma downloads Ransomware, where will she store it.
    You know 128GB is going to be over faster than my data cap.

    • @HardwareHaven
      @HardwareHaven  Před 2 lety

      Thanks! I thought it was fun haha
      And that’s a fair point lol

  • @andrez3640
    @andrez3640 Před rokem

    Fair and honest review ....we don't need high tech info just the stuff that matters..nice video enjoyed ..

  • @ikbintom
    @ikbintom Před 2 lety +8

    Secondhand ssds are also an option if you want to go cheap! For the last ten years, ssds have become much more resistant to wear, so it's not as risky as people tend to say anymore.. also nice that it avoids a little e-waste

    • @HardwareHaven
      @HardwareHaven  Před 2 lety +2

      Very true! I’m still running a Samsung 850 evo (I think ?) in my main desktop that I bought off of craigslist

    • @Omega_Mark
      @Omega_Mark Před 2 lety +1

      If you want longevity, do not buy QLC drives.

    • @ikbintom
      @ikbintom Před 2 lety

      @@Omega_Mark nowadays it's really not something anyone needs to worry about anymore, but I guess if you buy an SSD that's more than a decade old your advice is solid

    • @Omega_Mark
      @Omega_Mark Před 2 lety +1

      @@ikbintom There were no QLC drives a decade ago. QLC relies on size to write less to one cell, as that one cell is used to store FOUR states of the information. Samsung 980 PRO is TLC and there was a crapstorm due to it not being MLC anymore (even though it has a better cache).

    • @ikbintom
      @ikbintom Před 2 lety

      @@Omega_Mark you're right, good point

  • @dadgamer6717
    @dadgamer6717 Před 2 lety

    Thanks! I had a silicon power go DOA after a few days so avoided that brand since then but usually go for the cheap Chinese ones and try and find a dram cache for game drives... For boot drives I try and go for a brand like patriot or adata or get lucky with a crucial on sale!

  • @puixel
    @puixel Před 2 lety

    New SUB, really entretainment video!, gj

  • @K-SHABAB
    @K-SHABAB Před rokem +1

    i came on this video its 1year ago and iam going to buy a Adata su650 thanks it was very informative

  • @ardithconley2628
    @ardithconley2628 Před rokem

    I play around a lot with these drives due to Raspberry pi4 that I have. I have a bunch of these but never tested them. Thanks for doing my homework.

  • @MaximumRD
    @MaximumRD Před 2 lety

    I've been very satisfied with the balance of performance and cost with ADATA products in general.

  • @Yuriel1981
    @Yuriel1981 Před 2 lety

    Actually just built a NAS using an Inland 128gb and an old PC I had lying around. Running TrueNas using one of your video tutorials.... lol. Have 8Tb with 4Tb of parity. Actually kind of glad I went for Inland. A couple of reasons include I live near a Microcenter, it is their in house brand. And I got it sub 20$ on sale. Another is it's fairly middle to higher placing on the charts in all of the scenarios. Which lend to it being a bit more versatile. So not to bad even without a dram cache.

  • @kayneahnung3661
    @kayneahnung3661 Před 2 lety +4

    About SSD: I recently discovered a nice little SATA 2 M.2 enclosure (for about 40$) that lets you add two M.2 (SATA) SSDs with RAID1 in one 2.5" case - that should easily be the smallest Hardware Raid available right now - pretty cool for booting servers - it gives you redundancy with low power consumption, it only uses one external sata port but still gives you a raid.
    For example with your e350 Board you could use one of these and 3 standard 3.5" drives in Raid5-mode and get a decent backup server out of it.

    • @HardwareHaven
      @HardwareHaven  Před 2 lety

      That's awesome!

    • @skyline8121
      @skyline8121 Před 2 lety +1

      Can you share the name of the enclosure?

    • @kayneahnung3661
      @kayneahnung3661 Před 2 lety +2

      @@skyline8121 the enclosure is a delock 62590. Delock is a german company, but its only a trading company. So even if this brand is not available outside of the EU it should be available with a different label. There are also enclosures for two sata drives available from icybox (eg Icy Dock EZConvert Pro MB982SPR-2S R1).

    • @PainterVierax
      @PainterVierax Před 2 lety +1

      Hardware RAID is generally a very bad idea since recovery is limited to the same controller so be prepared to lose stored data when the chip fails.
      Better use soft RAID combined with passive PCIe to M.2 adapters and eventually some riser cables.

    • @kayneahnung3661
      @kayneahnung3661 Před 2 lety

      @@PainterVierax can't generally agree on that, especially for boot devices it is simply less trouble to have a hw raid 1. If you are worried about loosing the OS Config you can always do regular backups onthe sw raid for data (there I can agree - its better to have the data raid as sw raid) also those controllers are pretty reliable, I have 10 of them (most are sata to sata, not sata to nvme) and so far none failed ( the oldest ones are from 2014).
      Btw: qnap also offers those small hw raid enclosures. Both sata 2 sata and sata to nvme.

  • @churblefurbles
    @churblefurbles Před 10 měsíci

    Results scale with size, and yes the lexar seems to retain consistent when full which is interesting.

  • @norndev
    @norndev Před 2 lety

    I just buy refurbished big name branded ssds on ebay for pennies for small projects, usually the sellers list the health but it's always a gamble. Paid off a lot of times for me. I've been using brand new Kingston drives on my own builds for years and haven't had one die yet.

  • @mercix_vt
    @mercix_vt Před rokem +1

    as a person who used SILICON POWER A55 250GB before, its really good tho, bought for only 24$ back then
    and it performs almost same as my Samsung gen3 m2 ssd in my laptop

  • @kazi1
    @kazi1 Před 2 lety

    Great video

  • @lilChet
    @lilChet Před 2 lety +1

    vouch for the inland professional 120gb. I bought one 4 years ago and it's still going strong as a windows test bench drive, with no noticable slow downs

    • @zalankhan5743
      @zalankhan5743 Před 2 lety

      Hi if only wanted to buy it just for gaming is it a nice option

    • @lilChet
      @lilChet Před 2 lety

      @@zalankhan5743 probably go for something higher capacity for games, you can't fit much on 120 gigabytes lol
      but inland makes a 240 gig drive just like this for a bit more money, and you have my recommendation 👍

  • @MagnumMike44
    @MagnumMike44 Před 2 lety +1

    Interesting test results. The one thing I need to say about SSDs is they should not be referred to as Drives but rather Storage Devices. A drive is a device with mechanical elements built into it, mainly the spinning disk and its related components for reading and writing. 🙂

    • @HardwareHaven
      @HardwareHaven  Před 2 lety +2

      That’s fair I guess, but SSD is technically an abbreviation for Solid State Drive. Even though it might technically be incorrect in the engineering/mechanical context, I think it’s just commonly accepted. What do you call flash drives?

  • @billytk1225
    @billytk1225 Před 2 lety

    You should also be looking at the lifecycle of the drives, the manufactures usually supply that info. Also how long their warranty is, will give you an idea of the expected lifespan of the device.

    • @dmo848
      @dmo848 Před rokem

      3yrs is the silicon power it says

  • @ShawnFX
    @ShawnFX Před rokem +1

    Hi Hardware Haven! Just a thought, you should put Amazon affiliate links of the products in the description. That way if someone buys the product(no extra cost to them) using that link you can get a small kickback from it! And honestly you deserve it for making this great video!

    • @HardwareHaven
      @HardwareHaven  Před rokem +1

      Thanks for the tip! I actually use affiliate links, just didn’t in this video for some reason. Thanks for pointing it out haha!

  • @4RedDwarf3
    @4RedDwarf3 Před 5 měsíci

    I always use drives of this size, 1 smaller partition for windows, 1 larger for apps, mostly portable ones, plus net stuff like browsers. I then add other large mechanical drives, 1 for games, 1 for TV and films.

    • @MtFoxt
      @MtFoxt Před 3 měsíci +1

      Yeah same, for me I have another 256gb of nvme for caching my game using primocache

  • @souta95
    @souta95 Před 2 lety

    I can echo your findings on the Kingston drives. I used to work at a place where a lot of cheap, small SSDs were purchased and I found the Silicon Power drives to be the best all rounders, and the Kingston drives the most failure prone. I didn't get any AData drives as we were pinching every penny.

    • @raylopez99
      @raylopez99 Před 2 lety

      A lot of people hate Adata drives tho... but who knows? Sample size is the key.

  • @DTG4844
    @DTG4844 Před 2 lety

    My experience with Kingston is great, best budget drive in canada for resellers

  • @frizzletits8511
    @frizzletits8511 Před rokem

    ❤I would love to see a updated best bang for your buck ssds in the 1/2-2 tb range- something for a mass games drive or something

  • @charleshines1553
    @charleshines1553 Před 2 lety +1

    I got a silicon power S55 and and it is similar to the A55 with SLC cache. I know some multi layer chips can work as SLC but there is a real SLC NAND flash that is significantly more expensive per GB. The fact is that nearly all flash memory found on store shelves in Bestbuy or Walmart is not SLC. Most people would not pay so much despite being a much faster and longer lasting memory type. These days there is 96 layer flash memory and I cringe thinking of how short its life must be. It also makes me cringe to hear they are adding more layers too. I just hope they are doing SOMETHING to mitigate that severe longevity hit! We buy storage devices to RELIABLY store our files not be kept up at night with nightmares of all important files lost for good.

  • @starting5524
    @starting5524 Před rokem

    Loving this music

  • @SummonerArthur
    @SummonerArthur Před 2 lety +1

    Wish you had tried any of the Netac drives, I've had some good read/writte speed with them, and they've been very reliable.

  • @t1luso609
    @t1luso609 Před 2 lety +2

    interesting to see some cheap sdds tests. Not bad imo. I have MX500 from Crucial (1TB Models) and no regrets so far very solid for the money I have put in.

    • @PainterVierax
      @PainterVierax Před 2 lety

      TBH, the MX500 240GB are built better and not that much expensive than those 20usd 128GB.

    • @t1luso609
      @t1luso609 Před 2 lety

      @@PainterVierax oh yeah but still it´s good to see what makes it a good ssd or a weaker ssd.

  • @boysonicrevived
    @boysonicrevived Před 2 lety +1

    Thought I'd mention it, but my A400 started to throw IO errors within 10 months of putting it in use. I'm thrashing it until it dies, but, no longer in "production" since it made the host unstable. It was an A400 240GB, but all the same. :)

    • @HardwareHaven
      @HardwareHaven  Před 2 lety +1

      Ah that’s sad to hear… they seem to have good reviews, but looks like you and I both have had bad luck haha

  • @Jasontyo
    @Jasontyo Před 2 lety

    I tinker with old PCs running different linux distro's and some old macs. Having a pile of 120GB class SSDs is always useful

  • @chrisw1462
    @chrisw1462 Před 2 lety +1

    Never heard of Inland before watching this, so of course I didn't know that it's MicroCenter's store brand. They're good enough to have me wondering who MicroCenter gets them from.