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Posted 20 hours ago

Corsair MP510, Force Series, 240GB M.2 NVMe PCIe x4 Gen3 SSD (Sequential Read Speeds of up to 3,100 MB/s, Write Speeds of up to 1,050 MB/s) Black

£9.9£99Clearance
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ZTS2023
Joined in 2023
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as to your second statement: " as for performance being overkill.....it wont be once you put data on there " what do you mean with this ? I dont do anything except some gaming and do you mean that if I put some data on my nvme disk it will suddenly become slow/slower than a sata ssd? unless I trim it regularly? (which again, win10 does by default) just curious Drive is actively cooled - peak temperature during the diskmark was 45 celsius during the read tests. Maxed at 43 during writing so shouldn't be any throttling going on. let windows do it automatically on a schedule (this is default on a fresh win10 install, runs weekly)

Hi I've joined the forum just for this issue as I'm having the same slow write speed issue. As you have asked in your last post I've tried to test the speed with fast startup option disabled. The results are still the same. My drive is 10 months old now and it is the MP510 960GB. Write speed is always around 1000 MB/s and read speed 3400 MB/s. If you need I will post screenshots. The CORSAIR Force MP510 NVMe PCIe Gen3 x4 M.2 SSD provides extreme storage performance with up to 3,480MB/sec sequential read, and up to 3,000MB/ssequential write, for blazing fast read, write and response times. windows does have/support trim and its scheduled automatically to run unless you disable that in the defrag/optimize tool yourself , then you can run it manually on command instead, it will say "optimize" for SSD/NVMe drives and "defrag" if its a HDDplease note this important note, I'm using CrystalDiskMark 6 to do the tests BUT the speed test is different from version to another! or from other application like (AS SSD Benchmark)!. For example, when I use the latest CrystalDiskMark 7 version the results is always around 2000MB/s Read and 1000MB/s Write which is different. and when testing using (AS SSD Benchmark) app the results is around 1800MB/s Read and 2300MB/s Write AND that is not the case when I test my other NVMe Intel drive which always give me correct speed test with all the programs and versions even though there is only 26GB empty from the drive from the total size 1TB. For anybody experiencing this still. Could you post results before and after disabling fast startup within Windows? Please let me know your results in the responses. Power consumption is an important aspect to consider when determining which drive is better suited for your needs--particularly if you’re a laptop user. With the help of a Quarch HD Programmable Power Module, we can gain a deeper understanding of a storage device’s power characteristics. Random performance of 50/169MB/s nearly matches the BPX Pro again, but the MP510 ranked 4th in performance overall. From QD1-8, the MP510 delivers respectable results. It has pool-leading write performance, but read performance is just average. Sustained Sequential Write Performance Anyway, now that you mention spectre, I made a thread asking about spectre and hardware mitigation on the 9 generation coffee lake cpus here: https://forums.guru3d.com/threads/s...00k-cpus-performance-related-question.426082/ but since nobody replied yet and since you mentioned spectre, maybe I can ask you also so I will just paste my question here:

The Corsair Force MP510 utilizes a write cache buffer to improve write performance, just like most of the current SSDs in the market. When writing data to the drive, the MP510 writes at up to 3GB/s, but once the write cache fills after about 30GB of data, performance degrades to an average of 1050MB/s, which is still twice the bandwidth of SATA drive. Power Consumption All that performance is contained in a compact M.2 2280 form factor and connects using a high-speed NVMe PCIe Gen3 x4 M.2 interface, making it easy to install into a compatible motherboard or laptop. atleast from reading a lot about this on the win-raid forums and looking at benchmarks from there thats what it would seem like, the native driver is still plenty good for anyone though and none of this is ever noticeable in games or such I've been reading this thread in hopes of finding a solution, but I came up with it myself and it is pretty simple, yet it's not very convenient. All you have to do is perform a Secure Wipe through Corsair's SSD Toolbox.the speeds are way overkill for anything I do anyway (gaming) but still nice upgrade from an ancient regular SSD drive in my case,

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