Need Additional Storage

Caporegime
Joined
8 Nov 2008
Posts
29,517
Hi,

My motherboard is the Gigabyte X570 Aorus Master PCIe 4.0 (not sure if it's the 1.0 or revised 1.1/1.2 model). Bought it in 2019.

My secondary drive is only 1TB, which is inadequate for the disk space heavy modern games + mods.
I'm totally out of the loop with regards to what to get, but I'm thinking a 4TB might be the best option.

My OS is on an NVME drive, so I'm assuming that it would be best to drop in another NVME drive on one of the spare ports (my OS drive sits in the middle port).
Photo added below (hopefully, I haven't broken any forum rules with this one. Used Flickr and selected BBcode; added spoilers just to be on the safe side. :)

Gigabyte Mobo by A Z, on Flickr

I was thinking of this one, but I'm not sure if it's worth paying top dollar for what I assume is one of the fastest 4TB drives available? https://www.overclockers.co.uk/wd-b...lid-state-drive-with-heats-sto-wdc-03544.html

Ta. :)
 
If you're going to add this new drive as a secondary and just install games on it, then you don't need a high-end drive with huge amounts of cache as you will mostly be reading from it rather than writing to it. Cheap and cheerful would be best here.

However, if you plan on changing your primary drive, then yes, I would look at something with a decent lump of cache and good IOPS.
 
Personally, I think it's overkill.

I've been feeling the same way and upgraded to a Crucial P3 Plus 4TB for just under £150 a few weeks back - that's in the second slot to put my games on. I've got my OS on a 1TB P5 Plus, and I figured if I ever got a game where DirectStorage was a thing I'd put that specific game on the P5. But that still hasn't happened.

Someone posted some benchmarks around here, where a reviewer was looking at the difference between SATA3, NVME PCIE4, and NVME PCIE5 I think - and though you could see the improvement over SATA3, the NVME drives were really much of a muchness.

I think 4TB makes sense, because games are getting bigger and bigger, and it's nice just not having to worry about it, but I don't think going for a high-spec drive is going to have any real world impact for what you're talking about.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top Bottom