TSSDR TEST BENCH AND PROTOCOL
SSD testing at TSSDR differs slightly, depending on whether we are looking at consumer or enterprise storage media. For our Kingson KC2500 NVMe PCIe 3 M.2 SSD testing today, our goal is to test in a system that has been optimized with our SSD Optimization Guide. To see the best performance possible, the CPU C states have been disabled, C1E support has been disabled, and Enhanced Intel SpeedStep Technology (EIST) has been disabled.
SYSTEM COMPONENTS
The components of this Test Bench are detailed below. All hardware is linked for purchase and product sales may be reached by a simple click on the individual item. As well, the title is linked back to the individual build article where performance testing can be validated.
TSSDR ASROCK Z370 TAICHI TEST BENCH (link)
PC CHASSIS: | Corsair Graphite 760T Arctic White Window Chassis |
MOTHERBOARD: | ASRock Z370 Taichi |
CPU: | Intel Coffee Lake Core i7-8770K |
CPU COOLER: | Corsair Hydro Series H110i GTX V.2 |
POWER SUPPLY: | Corsair RM850x 80Plus |
GRAPHICS: | MSI Radeon RX570 |
MEMORY: | Corsair Vengeance RGB 32GB DDR4 3600Mhz C18 |
STORAGE: | Intel Optane 900P 480GB SSD |
KEYBOARD: | Corsair Strafe RGB Silent Gaming |
MOUSE: | Corsair M65 Pro Gaming |
OS | Microsoft Windows 10 Pro 64 Bit |
BENCHMARK SOFTWARE
The software in use for today’s analysis is typical of many of our reviews and consists of Crystal Disk Info, ATTO Disk Benchmark, Crystal Disk Mark, AS SSD, Anvil’s Storage Utilities, AJA, TxBench, PCMark 8, along with our true data transfer speed tests. Our selection of software allows each to build on the last and to provide validation to results already obtained.
Crystal Disk Info is a great tool for displaying the characteristics and health of storage devices. It displays everything from temperatures, the number of hours the device has been powered, and even to the extent of informing you of the firmware of the device.
Crystal Disk Info validates that our SSD is running in PCIe 3.0 x4 (four lane), and also that NVMe 1.3 protocol is in use.
ATTO Disk Benchmark is perhaps one of the oldest benchmarks going and is definitely the main staple for manufacturer performance specifications. ATTO uses RAW or compressible data and, for our benchmarks, we use a set length of 256mb and test both the read and write performance of various transfer sizes ranging from 0.5 to 8192kb. Manufacturers prefer this method of testing as it deals with raw (compressible) data rather than random (includes incompressible data) which, although more realistic, results in lower performance results.
Listed specifications for the Kingston KC2500 are 3500MB/s read and 2900MB/s write. This ATTO results comes within an acceptable range of that.
Why you compare it to the PRO model of Samsung??? It’s like the EVO or EVO plus model. And their proces are quite SIMILIAR.
Besides Kingston has been caught cheating (sending models with better performance to reviewers, but selling slower bits to comsumers…)
The review… speaks for itself with respect to comparison in both PCMark 8 and true data testing. Do you have a link where something was published to back up your claim of ‘cheating’ It’s false. Will leave your post for amusement though.
Thanks for this great test! I will buy one KC2500 now 🙂