• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.

Intel Releases Its SSD 760p to the Wild With Competitive Pricing, Performance

Raevenlord

News Editor
Joined
Aug 12, 2016
Messages
3,755 (1.15/day)
Location
Portugal
System Name The Ryzening
Processor AMD Ryzen 9 5900X
Motherboard MSI X570 MAG TOMAHAWK
Cooling Lian Li Galahad 360mm AIO
Memory 32 GB G.Skill Trident Z F4-3733 (4x 8 GB)
Video Card(s) Gigabyte RTX 3070 Ti
Storage Boot: Transcend MTE220S 2TB, Kintson A2000 1TB, Seagate Firewolf Pro 14 TB
Display(s) Acer Nitro VG270UP (1440p 144 Hz IPS)
Case Lian Li O11DX Dynamic White
Audio Device(s) iFi Audio Zen DAC
Power Supply Seasonic Focus+ 750 W
Mouse Cooler Master Masterkeys Lite L
Keyboard Cooler Master Masterkeys Lite L
Software Windows 10 x64
Intel today released their mainstream answer to users' fast, NVMe-based storage needs, the SSD 760p. We've already covered this new consumer, mainstream SSD series in our news pieces; however, information and press decks have now come directly from Intel, allowing us a clearer picture of how Intel sees its products to fit into the consumer market - and hopefully, in consumer's choices.





The Intel SSD 760p series features the company's own 64-layer, TLC 3D NAND, which Intel claims is more advanced than the competition's, offering up to 20% areal density, and increased GB per wafer (which should theoretically translate to lower costs for end users). Intel is quoting performance that's up to 2x faster than the company's previous SSD 600p, while consuming just half of that series' power, and offering NVMe performance at near-SATA pricing. These will come in the M.2 form-factor in capacities ranging from 128 GB to 2 TB, offer up to 3,230 MB/s sequential read and 1,625 MB/s sequential writes, with up to 340K IOPS Random Read performance and up to 275K IOPS Random Write.


The overall tech community reception to Intel's launch - both performance and price-wise - seems to be pretty warm, for one thing. For now, only the 128 GB, 256 GB, and 512 GB versions' pricing is known to the public, and these will go for $74, $109, and $199 respectively, which really does amount to a good deal.

View at TechPowerUp Main Site
 
Anandtech is on the ball today, as they've also got benchmarks of this drive up - https://www.anandtech.com/show/12349/the-intel-ssd-760p-512gb-review
Cheaper than the Samsung 860 Pro SATA drive and cheaper than the 600p. Not a bad deal by the looks of things, even though it's not a super high-performing drive, it's still generally way ahead of SATA drives.
 
Anandtech is on the ball today, as they've also got benchmarks of this drive up - https://www.anandtech.com/show/12349/the-intel-ssd-760p-512gb-review
Cheaper than the Samsung 860 Pro SATA drive and cheaper than the 600p. Not a bad deal by the looks of things, even though it's not a super high-performing drive, it's still generally way ahead of SATA drives.

Which is all that can really be asked at its current price-point. Color me impressed, these look great in the performance/dollar department. Maybe I'll finally populate my empty M.2 bays...
 
Just an FYI none of the recent SSD benches (even on AT) include the spectre/meltdown fix, so hold on to your hats & take the results with a pinch of salt.
Also I'm wondering if the IOPS & seq r/w numbers advertised should be corrected downwards :rolleyes:
 
Order 2 in 512... only two drives that will be in my PC :)
 
Intel 600P was sole reason I was forced to upgrade to 960 EVO which has been remarkable. My Samsung 960 EVO excels everywhere 600p lags behind and intel never released further firmware updates.
I am in need of a bigger SSD and 760p specs on paper looks promising, but not sure if I am willing to give 760p another trail run. Might wait for Samsung 970.

600p and 960EVO.jpg
 
Last edited:
Back
Top