UPDATE 29/11/2011
The Sandforce based S510 and S511 have now both been added.
The Sandforce based S510 and S511 have now both been added.
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ADATA S510
ADATA S511
Sorry if this has already been mentioned, but...
Can I ask why the ADATA S510 was the only one run without the "All 0x00, 0Fill" test data?
My understanding is that if the drive uses compression (and I'm guessing most/all the SandForce ones do?) then using all 1s or all 0s will compress a lot better than random data. So while this setting does seem to favor drives that use compression, it also seems unrealistic. But it would explain why the S510 scores so much lower as the data being used is more realistic.
One thing I would like to see is more SSD manufacturers bringing out these drives in 3.5" format.
Other than the OCZ Vertex 2, which is probably not as fast as many of these latest models, there is not much else around.
I know that there are adapters available, but I would still prefer a 'native' 3.5" drive... especially for use in a desktop system
Why? It's just making the drive bigger for the sake of it, there's no benefit. Using an adapter will achieve the exact same thing.
Wut.Most modern cases dont even have 3.5" slots anymore
I agree. Smaller the better.
Are the aData drives still on track for been in stock tomorrow?
This is the mistake that was made by the test team and as such should be ignored.
The Force 3 result is what you should expect in terms of performance here
To be honest, since I can't guarantee that all the data I'm reading and writing to the disk will be highly compressible, I'd argue that the S510 is actually the only one done 'right'. Using data that is highly compressible seems like a tactic to inflate the performance numbers. Otherwise surely the M4 wouldn't be as highly regarded as it is. Other than the fact it's the only one not using a Sandforce controller (I believe).