HARDWARE

OCZ Vertex 3.20 Solid State Drive Review (Part 2)

8/9/2013 9:21:55 AM

Test configuration

For our today’s SSD test session, we use a unified test system built on an Intel H77 based mainboard, which has two SATA 6 Gbit/s ports. We are going to use these ports to connect the tested SSDs.

For the today’s testing participants, it is clear that the new OCZ Vertex 3.20 240 GB has to be compared with the various incarnations of the second generation based-Sand Force models, which have been multiplying day by day, as well as for other popular SSDs. Therefore, you will find the numbers on the diagrams about the performance of other products based on the SandForce controller: Intel SSD 520, Kingston SSDNow V300, Corsair Force GS and Corsair Force GT, which is an overview analysis for the OCZ Vertex 3. The other platforms are going to stand for the following participants: Corsair SSDs on LAMD LM87800 controller (Neutron GTX and Neutron), OCZ Vertex 4 on Indilinx Everest 2 controller, the latest OCZ Vector SSD on Indilinx Barefoot 3 controller, Crucial m4 on Marvell 9174, and Plextor SSDs on Marvell 9174 controller (M5S) and Marvell 9187 controller (M5 Pro). All of the hard drives mentioned above used synchronous MLC flash memory. Especially, Crucial m4, Corsair Force GT, Corsair Neutron, Intel SSD 520, OCZ Vertex 4, OCZ Vector and Plextor M5S use 25 nm IMFT memory with ONFI-interface. And Corsair Force GS, Corsair Neutron GTX and Plextor M5 Pro use Toggle Mode MLC NAND produced by using 2x nm or 19 nm technology.

OCZ Vertex 3.20 Solid State Drive

OCZ Vertex 3.20 Solid State Drive

Overall our test was configured as follows:

·         Intel Core i5-3470S (Ivy Bridge, 4 cores, 2.9 GHz, EIST and Turbo Boost turned off);

·         Intel DH77DF mainboard (BIOS 0108);

·         2 x 2 GB DDR3-1333 SDRAM DIMM 9-9-9-24-1T;

·         Crucial m4 256 GB system disk (CT256M4SSD2);

·         Tested SSDs: Corsair Force GS Series 240 GB (CSSD-F240GBGS-BK, firmware version 5.03); Corsair Force GT Series 240 GB (CSSD-F240GBGT-BK, firmware version 5.03); Corsair Neutron GTX 240 GB (CSSD-N240GBGTX-BK, firmware version 2.06); Corsair Neutron 240 GB (CSSD-N240GB3-BK, firmware version 2.06); Crucial m4 256 GB (CT256M4SSD2, firmware version 070H); Intel SSD 520 240 GB (SSDSC2CW240A3K5, firmware version 400i); Kingston SSDNow V300 240 GB (SV300S37A/240G, firmware version 5.0.5); OCZ Vertex 3.20 240 GB (VTX3-25SAT3-240G.20, firmware version 2.30); OCZ Vertex 4 256 GB (VTX4-25SAT3-256G, firmware version 1.5); OCZ Vector 256 GB (VTR1-25SAT3-256G, firmware version 2.0); Plextor M5S 256 GB (PX-256M5S, firmware version 1.03); Plextor M5 Pro 256 GB (PX-256M5P, firmware version 1.03).

·         Microsoft Windows 7 SP1 Ultimate x64

·         Drivers: Intel Chipset Driver 9.3.0.1026; Intel Graphics Media Accelerator Driver 9.17.10.2932; Intel Rapid Storage Technology 11.7.0.1013.

Performance

The process of random and sequential read/write

We use Anvil's Storage Utilities 1.0.51 to measure the speeds of random and sequential write. The synthetic benchmark integrated into this software suite gives an excellent overview of the products by performing a series of speed characteristics of the tested SSD.

The results you see here refer to the FOB (fresh out-of-box) non-degraded SSD performance. Furthermore, we use the incompressible data, which is the most usable scenario for the LSI SF-2281 controller that uses on-the-fly data compression. However, our tests show that in today's world when the data can only be partially compressed and the used flash memory has high-speed synchronous interface, the compression algorithms do not greatly affect the actual performance of SSDs with the SandForce controller suite. Consequently, we renounced the idea of ​​testing SandForce SSDs based on compressed data: These results will be proprietarily artificial in nature and there will not have any practical value for us today.

The process of sequential read

The process of sequential read

Random Read 4K

Random Read 4K

Random Read 4K QD=4

Random Read 4K QD=4

Random Read 4K QD=16

Random Read 4K QD=16

Random Read 32K

Random Read 32K

Random Read 128K

Random Read 128K

The process of sequential write

The process of sequential write

Random Write 4K

Random Write 4K

Random Write 4K QD=4

Random Write 4K QD=4

Random Write 4K QD=16

Random Write 4K QD=16

The remarkable longevity of the LSI SF-2281 controller is reflected in the performance of SSDs using it. They are not very quick in processing the blocks of 4KB random-address data and only likely to match today’s leading products in sequential processing operations or processing the large data blocks. The OCZ Vertex 3.20 is not better than the other models of the second generation SandForce platform. What’s more, it is one of the worst models that utilize synchronous flash.

Unfortunately, the modernization of the Vertex 3 models is just good in terms of reducing manufacturing cost but does not provide any performance benefits. If you would like a faster SSD, OCZ exposes the Vertex 4 and Vector models that are more appealing in this respect. The Vertex 3.20, for its part, is an inexpensive and even not highly fast solution, which is even slower than its predecessor, the Vertex 3. We are able to easily see this since the Corsair Force GT has also the same Intel’s 25nm synchronous flash platform, is a perfect analysis to show this.

 

Other  
 
Most View
CPU Deepcool FROSTWIN Cooler (Part 2)
Windows Server 2008 and Windows Vista : Group Policy Management Console Delegation - Managing GPOs, Editing GPOs
ZTE Grand X V970 Android Smartphone - Aerodynamics Of A Car
Wacom Cintiq 24HD Touch - Pen-Enabled Display Plus Multi-Touch Gestures (Part 2)
Buyer’s Guide: e-Readers That Fits Your Needs Best (Part 3)
ASP.NET 4 in VB 2010 : Logging Exceptions (part 1) - Viewing the Windows Event Logs
Lab Test: Satellite - SKY 2TB (Part 1)
The Porsche Macan S Diesel 3.0 V6 – The Ultimate SUV You Can Drive (Part 2)
Exchange Server 2007 Management and Maintenance Practices : Best Practices for Performiming Database Maintenance (part 2) - Offline Database Maintenance
2013-Version Dell XPS 13 - Good Performance But Expensive Price (Part 1)
REVIEW
- First look: Apple Watch

- 3 Tips for Maintaining Your Cell Phone Battery (part 1)

- 3 Tips for Maintaining Your Cell Phone Battery (part 2)
VIDEO TUTORIAL
- How to create your first Swimlane Diagram or Cross-Functional Flowchart Diagram by using Microsoft Visio 2010 (Part 1)

- How to create your first Swimlane Diagram or Cross-Functional Flowchart Diagram by using Microsoft Visio 2010 (Part 2)

- How to create your first Swimlane Diagram or Cross-Functional Flowchart Diagram by using Microsoft Visio 2010 (Part 3)
Popular Tags
Microsoft Access Microsoft Excel Microsoft OneNote Microsoft PowerPoint Microsoft Project Microsoft Visio Microsoft Word Active Directory Biztalk Exchange Server Microsoft LynC Server Microsoft Dynamic Sharepoint Sql Server Windows Server 2008 Windows Server 2012 Windows 7 Windows 8 Adobe Indesign Adobe Flash Professional Dreamweaver Adobe Illustrator Adobe After Effects Adobe Photoshop Adobe Fireworks Adobe Flash Catalyst Corel Painter X CorelDRAW X5 CorelDraw 10 QuarkXPress 8 windows Phone 7 windows Phone 8 BlackBerry Android Ipad Iphone iOS
Top 10
3 Tips for Maintaining Your Cell Phone Battery (part 2) - Discharge Smart, Use Smart
3 Tips for Maintaining Your Cell Phone Battery (part 1) - Charge Smart
OPEL MERIVA : Making a grand entrance
FORD MONDEO 2.0 ECOBOOST : Modern Mondeo
BMW 650i COUPE : Sexy retooling of BMW's 6-series
BMW 120d; M135i - Finely tuned
PHP Tutorials : Storing Images in MySQL with PHP (part 2) - Creating the HTML, Inserting the Image into MySQL
PHP Tutorials : Storing Images in MySQL with PHP (part 1) - Why store binary files in MySQL using PHP?
Java Tutorials : Nested For Loop (part 2) - Program to create a Two-Dimensional Array
Java Tutorials : Nested For Loop (part 1)