Tuesday, January 18th 2022

PATRIOT announces Availability of the P400 PCIe Gen4x4 m.2 SSD

PATRIOT, a global leader in performance memory, SSDs, gaming peripherals, and flash storage solutions, is pleased to announce the PATRIOT P400 PCIe Gen4x4 NVMe M.2 SSD with capacities of 512 GB and 1 TB. The PATRIOT P400 was built using the latest PCIe Gen4x4 NVMe controller and best-in-class components to deliver faster data access, multi-application processing, and quick transfer speeds up to 5000 MB/s in sequential. The PATRIOT P400 can offer double the transfer speeds compared to standard PCIe 3x4 solutions with lower power consumption making it the best solution for laptop battery efficiency. In addition, the exclusive thin graphene heatshield provides outstanding heat dissipation, especially in systems with limited space.

"The PATRIOT P400 M.2 is designed to be an ideal solution for budget-minded users looking to achieve a cost-efficient storage solution with PCI Express gen4x4 performance. Our design team has created an excellent thermal solution using a slim graphene heatshield which can avoid any physical interference when using this drive-in system with limited space, such as a thin laptop." Said Roger Shinmoto, the vice president of PATRIOT MEMORY.
The Patriot P400 is built from a single-sided M.2 designed to save space and ensure maximum compatibility with the thinnest laptops and small form factor desktops. Stability and reliability are critical issues when creating outstanding storage products, and each P400 comes with advanced firmware to provide end-to-end data path protection and a Smart ECC technology to ensure data integrity and avoid data corruption during intensive processing. These ensure that peak performance will be sustained while preserving high-performance data transfers across a wide variety of workloads, from video editing, gaming battles to visual and audio creative projects.

The PATRIOT P400 is designed to strengthen the system's overall performance and is backed by PATRIOT's 3-year warranty. The P400 delivers one of the most reliable price-to-performance SSD's on the market.
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4 Comments on PATRIOT announces Availability of the P400 PCIe Gen4x4 m.2 SSD

#1
bonehead123
Cheap is as cheap does.......

'nuff said :)
Posted on Reply
#2
Athlonite
bonehead123Cheap is as cheap does.......

'nuff said :)
backed by PATRIOT's 3-year warranty.

nevermind that almost every other NVMe SSD comes with a 5yr or more warranty that'll be a nope from me on that basis alone
Posted on Reply
#3
Woomack
Athlonitebacked by PATRIOT's 3-year warranty.

nevermind that almost every other NVMe SSD comes with a 5yr or more warranty that'll be a nope from me on that basis alone
Most SSD don't have more than 2-3 years of warranty. You only look at brands like Samsung or high WD series that have 5-10 years while the market is flooded by many more brands. Remember it's not a high series SSD but something from the middle shelf, even though it's PCIe 4.0 x4.
The only thing I can add is that the P400 has pretty good performance in random operations considering it's not a high series SSD. Not the fastest but pretty respectable if we compare it to the top series.
Posted on Reply
#4
Athlonite
WoomackMost SSD don't have more than 2-3 years of warranty. You only look at brands like Samsung or high WD series that have 5-10 years while the market is flooded by many more brands. Remember it's not a high series SSD but something from the middle shelf, even though it's PCIe 4.0 x4.
The only thing I can add is that the P400 has pretty good performance in random operations considering it's not a high series SSD. Not the fastest but pretty respectable if we compare it to the top series.
I wouldn't exactly call the ADATA XPG SX8200Pro a high end SSD and it comes with an 5yr warranty and it's only lower middle tier so your point is.. Patriot is not a low/mid tier manufacturer especially for this product which they state they use best in class controller and nand so you'd expect a correspondingly best in class warranty of 5+ years only having a 3yr warranty just smacks of not really using "Best in Class" anything in this NVMe SSD
Posted on Reply
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