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Tom's Hardware > Forum > Storage > SSD > [Solved] OCZ vertex 2 benchmarks

[Solved] OCZ vertex 2 benchmarks

Forum Storage : SSD [Solved] OCZ vertex 2 benchmarks

Best answer from malmental.

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So I installed my SSD a few days ago( clean install, AHCI, Intel f6 drivers - (shows up as MS drivers on device manager, but that's a different story)) and did some benchmarks.

WEI was 7.7 and ATTO got up to the 280 range so I know those look ok.

Can someone help me figure out if these Crystal Disk Mark numbers look good? I know these numbers will be lower than the ATTO numbers.

Sidenote: The OCZ site you can check your firmware version through CrystalDisk. I don't see it anywhere.

http://img208.imageshack.us/img208/2/crystaldisk.png

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The good news is that after an initial dip in performance, SSDs tend to level off..

Users typically notice that an SSD drive runs at the manufacturer's stated peak I/O performance at first, but soon after that it begins to drop. That's because, unlike a hard disk drive, any write operation to an SSD requires not one step, but two: an erase followed by the write.

When an SSD is new, the NAND flash memory inside it has been pre-erased; Users start with a clean slate, so to speak. But, as data is written to the drive, data management algorithms in the controller begin to move that data around the flash memory in an operation known as wear-leveling. Even though wear-leveling is meant to prolong the life of the drive, it can eventually lead to performance issues.

SSD performance and endurance are related. Generally, the poorer the performance of a drive, the shorter the lifespan. That's because the management overhead of an SSD is related to how many writes and erases to the drive take place. The more write/erase cycles there are, the shorter the drive's lifespan. Consumer-grade multi-level cell (MLC) memory can sustain from 2,000 to 10,000 write cycles. Enterprise-class single-level cell (SLC) memory can last through 10 times the number of write cycles of an MLC-based drive.

A brief refresher on the difference between the two technologies: SLC simply means one bit of data is written to each flash memory cell, while MLC allows two bits, or more, to be written to cells. MLC drives are notably less expensive than SLC drives.

Manufacturers moderate how long the flash memory in an SSD will last in several ways, but all involve either adding DRAM cache -- so data writes are buffered to reduce the number of write/erase cycles -- or using special firmware located in the drive's processor or controller to combine writes for efficiency.

According to Bob Merritt, an analyst with research firm Convergent Semiconductors, another element of SSD longevity is whether extra memory cells are available and, if so, how many. Some manufacturers over-provision storage, so that when blocks of flash memory wear out, additional blocks become available. For example, a drive may be listed as offering 120GB of memory, but may actually contain 140GB of capacity. The extra 20GB remains unused until it's needed.

The performance problems involving Intel's consumer-grade X25-M SSD were related to its wear-leveling algorithm.

At its most basic, wear-leveling algorithms are used to more evenly distribute data across flash memory so that no one portion wears out faster than another, which prolongs the life of whole drive. The SSD's controller in wear-leveling operations keeps a record of where data is set down on the drive as it's relocated from one portion to another.


Message edited by malmental on 12-12-2010 at 07:40:48 PM
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Best answer selected by mousemonkey.

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This topic has been closed by Mousemonkey

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