Sabrent Rocket 1 TB M.2 NVMe SSD Review 10

Sabrent Rocket 1 TB M.2 NVMe SSD Review

(10 Comments) »

Introduction

Sabrent Logo

Sabrent is an American hardware manufacturer that was founded in 1998. Their product ranges include external drive enclosures, cables, chargers, card readers, USB hubs and similar peripherals. In the last few years they've made a name for themselves in the SSD market by offering highly cost effective solid-state drives with good performance.

Today, we have for review the Sabrent Rocket, which comes in the M.2 form factor and a fast PCI-Express x4 3.0 NVMe connection to interface with the rest of the system.

Under the hood, the Rocket is built around a Phison E12S controller paired with Micron 96-layer 3D TLC flash. We previously reviewed the Sabrent Rocket Q, which uses QLC instead and is a bit more affordable, but with lower performance. As expected, the SSD includes pseudo-SLC caching to improve performance. The Rocket also has a DRAM cache chip to avoid the random write performance issues of DRAM-less SSDs.

Sabrent is offering the Rocket in capacities of 256 GB ($50), 512 GB ($80), 1 TB ($150), 2 TB ($280), and 4 TB ($850). Endurance for these models is set at 380 TBW, 800 TBW, 1665 TBW, and 3115 TBW respectively. Sabrent also includes a five-year warranty.



Specifications: Sabrent Rocket 1 TB
Brand:Sabrent
Model:SB-ROCKET-1TB
Capacity:1024 GB (953 GB usable)
No additional overprovisioning
Controller:Phison PS5012-E12-27
Flash:Micron 96-layer 3D TLC B27A
IA7BG63AVA
DRAM:1x 512 MB Kingston DDR3-1866
-D2516ECMDXGJD
Endurance:1665 TBW
Form Factor:M.2 2280
Interface:PCIe Gen 3 x4, NVMe 1.3
Device ID:Sabrent
Firmware:RKT303.1
Warranty:Five years
Price at Time
of Review:
$150 / 15 cents per GB

Packaging

Package Front
Package Back


The Drive

SSD Front
SSD Back

The drive uses the M.2 2280 form factor, which makes it 22 mm wide and 80 mm long.

SSD Interface Connector

Like most M.2 NVMe SSDs, the Sabrent Rocket connects to the host system over a PCI-Express 3.0 x4 interface.


Sabrent's sticker doubles up as a heatspreader due to it having copper foil underneath.

SSD Teardown PCB Front
SSD Teardown PCB Back

On the PCB, you'll find the controller, four flash chips, and a DRAM chip.

Chip Component Analysis

SSD Controller

The flash controller is made by Phison and their latest model with support for QLC and PCI-Express 3.0 x4. On the Rocket (without the "Q") it runs in TLC mode, though. It uses eight flash channels and is produced on a 28 nm process at TSMC Taiwan. The main difference to the E12 without the "S" is that the E12S is physically smaller, works with half the DRAM capacity of the E12, and uses a metal case, which helps with thermals.

SSD Flash Chips

The four TLC flash chips are made by Micron, built using 64-layers on a 3D NAND production process.

SSD DRAM Chip

A Kingston DDR3-1866 chip provides 512 MB of fast DRAM storage for the controller to store the mapping tables.
Our Patreon Silver Supporters can read articles in single-page format.
Discuss(10 Comments)
Apr 26th, 2024 17:43 EDT change timezone

New Forum Posts

Popular Reviews

Controversial News Posts