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Sony Unveils the SLW-M Series Consumer SSDs

btarunr

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Sony is making its international debut in consumer SSDs, with the SLW-M series. The company was selling some of its first SSDs locally in Japan. Built in the 7 mm thick 2.5-inch form-factor, the drives feature SATA 6 Gb/s interface, and come in capacities of 240 GB (SLW-MG2) and 480 GB (SLW-MG4). There's no word on the controller or NAND flash make, but the company is advertising performance figures of up to 560 MB/s reads, with up to 530 MB/s writes. A 9.5 mm spacer, and a license to Acronis True image 2015 HD come included. Sony is also including its very own drive management software, the Sony SSD Toolbox.



Update: DIYPC HK posted a picture of the drive's PCB. It reveals a rebranded Phison S10 series controller, and Toshiba A19 TLC NAND flash.

View at TechPowerUp Main Site
 
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Sure, why not. If the price and endurance is there it'll sell. Performance too obviously, but I can't imagine it not having performance.
 
Let me guess.. SM2256 and A19 tlc flash.
 
So Phison S10 and a19 tlc flash...

Nothing we haven't seen before...
 
It clearly gets nowhere near those figures https://www.chiphell.com/thread-1450858-1-1.html
Roughly $152 for the 480GB model.

Teardown here http://www.diypc.hk/archives/19941 The 240GB SKU seems to perform slightly better.

H1 10-X controller? Some are suggesting it's a rebranded PHISON PS3110

TLC tends to be a little slower with the advantage of higher capacities compared to MLC. Another thing to take into account is the benchmark being used. I wonder what the ATTO results would look like since ATTO is catered more towards compressible data transfers. The Phison controller is new which is also being used in many current SSD's
 
TLC tends to be a little slower with the advantage of higher capacities compared to MLC. Another thing to take into account is the benchmark being used. I wonder what the ATTO results would look like since ATTO is catered more towards compressible data transfers. The Phison controller is new which is also being used in many current SSD's

TLC is a lot slower at writes than MLC. For example, crucial bx200 240G can only pull ~70MB/s of sustained writes once slc buffer runs out. Thats worse than some usb3 flash drives.
 
Sony is making its international debut in consumer SSDs,

:) does it come with a pre installed Rootkit maybe in the firmware :rolleyes:

Sony Still Got a long way to go before they earn the Consumer's Trust
 
Is anyone still (even) using SandForce controllers, the SF3000 series or have they been entirely withdrawn as OEM from the market since the original company got bought out? Despite criticisms, I really liked their concept and how they utilized real-time compression to extend life and enhance speed on compressible data. There were tons of SSD's using their controllers and now I can't think of any. They are either Samsung, Marvell or other less "famous" like Phison.
 
Is anyone still (even) using SandForce controllers, the SF3000 series or have they been entirely withdrawn as OEM from the market since the original company got bought out? Despite criticisms, I really liked their concept and how they utilized real-time compression to extend life and enhance speed on compressible data. There were tons of SSD's using their controllers and now I can't think of any. They are either Samsung, Marvell or other less "famous" like Phison.

Kingston still uses them. But sf2000 is not relevant anymore, because it does not support TLC. And everyone is (sadly) moving to TLC.

While idea of compression is nice and all (and sandforce is not the only one using it), their execution is just plain garbage. They thought compressing _everything_ was a good idea. Also, for some reason their controllers handle trim very poorly (among other things) which results in very noticeable drop of write performance over time (i've gone from 140MBs to 90MBs on a 120G drive).
 
But SF3500 series supports 10nm TLC as well and one would think they'd address other issues. But I can't remeber anyone actually using such it in their drives.
 
But SF3500 series supports 10nm TLC as well and one would think they'd address other issues. But I can't remeber anyone actually using such it in their drives.

Because they don't exist yet. At least not in mass form. And probably never will, because last time i checked it's too slow and too hot. If it came out like 1.5 years ago, then it would make sense for the time being and right now we should be seeing its successor (pcie3.0, 3d support, better random performance).
 
So, basically new generations of SandForce controllers will only serve Seagate later on when SSD's become their bigger part of the portfolio. Or maybe for hybrid drives though afaik they don't use SandForce on those either.
 
So, basically new generations of SandForce controllers will only serve Seagate later on when SSD's become their bigger part of the portfolio. Or maybe for hybrid drives though afaik they don't use SandForce on those either.

Possibly. Although as far as hybrid drives are concerned, they need NAND controllers within HDD controller itself. This will drive the price down even further. It makes no sense to slap a controller like sf3500 for caching purposes.
 
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