I passed today a cheap Micron SSD - model M1100, which in the 256GB version cost me PLN 279 (which is quite a cheap drive, considering the current price of GoodRAM Iridium PRO 240GB - about PLN 100 more). I put in tests, maybe somebody will find these measurements, because the price is quite attractive.
Briefly about the disk:
- 2.5 "disk format, 7mm high, with a frame that adjusts it to a thickness of 9.5mm
- Marvell 88SS1074 controller - four-channel, the same also found in Crucial MX300, Kingston UV400, Sandisk X400 disks
- Tron 3D NAND flash from Micron
- 512MB LPDDR3 cache
- 5-year warranty limited by the TBW limit of 120TB (a copy purchased in X-Com is sold with a 3-year seller's warranty).
In contrast, I will present the results by comparing three disks:
- Micron M1100 256GB (first column)
- GoodRAM Iridium PRO 240GB (second column)
- GoodRAM IRDM 240GB (third column)
Tests made on the same machine (MSI Z97-G43 motherboard, Pentium G3258 @ 4.6GHz, Intel SATA drivers not of the first freshness, Win 7 x64).
And that's it.
Briefly about the disk:
- 2.5 "disk format, 7mm high, with a frame that adjusts it to a thickness of 9.5mm
- Marvell 88SS1074 controller - four-channel, the same also found in Crucial MX300, Kingston UV400, Sandisk X400 disks
- Tron 3D NAND flash from Micron
- 512MB LPDDR3 cache
- 5-year warranty limited by the TBW limit of 120TB (a copy purchased in X-Com is sold with a 3-year seller's warranty).
In contrast, I will present the results by comparing three disks:
- Micron M1100 256GB (first column)
- GoodRAM Iridium PRO 240GB (second column)
- GoodRAM IRDM 240GB (third column)
Tests made on the same machine (MSI Z97-G43 motherboard, Pentium G3258 @ 4.6GHz, Intel SATA drivers not of the first freshness, Win 7 x64).
Spoiler:
And that's it.