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Micron unveils world’s fastest C300 SATA 6Gb/s SSDs

Micron unveils world’s fastest C300 SATA 6Gb/s SSDs

Memory maker Micron Technology has drastically upped the stakes in the SSD race with today’s announcement of the RealSSD C300 series of solid state disks.

The list of new and impressive features are legion: A blazing fast ONFI 2.1 NAND flash interface, 34nm NAND cells, support for the new SATA 6Gb/s standard, and numbingly fast sustained read/write performance of 355/215MBps. As a matter of perspective, the fastest 2.5″ consumer SSD currently available is the 128GB OCZ Vertex Turbo at 270/200MBps read/write.

“The C300 SSD not only delivers on all the inherent advantages of SSDs – improved reliability and lower power use – but also leverages a finely tuned architecture and high-speed ONFI 2.1 NAND to provide a whole new level of performance,” said Dean Klein, vice president of memory system development at Micron.

To drive the point home, the company has published a video which demonstrates the real-world potential of the C300 when pitted against standard mechanical drives in tasks like booting and file copying.

Micron states that it has already begun sampling the product, and will bring it to retail in 128GB and 256GB varieties at the beginning of the New Year.

Boise, Idaho, Wednesday, December 02, 2009 – Micron Technology, Inc. has raised the performance bar for SSDs. The company today announced its RealSSD C300 SSD, the industry’s fastest for notebook and desktop PCs. Micron’s new RealSSD C300 drive enables users to enjoy a more powerful and responsive computing experience—including faster operating system (OS) boot and hibernate times, and speedier application load, data transfer and file copying.

“The C300 SSD not only delivers on all the inherent advantages of SSDs – improved reliability and lower power use – but also leverages a finely tuned architecture and high-speed ONFI 2.1 NAND to provide a whole new level of performance,” said Dean Klein, vice president of memory system development at Micron.

While benchmark tests have shown that the C300 SSD is the fastest PC SSD leveraging the industry standard SATA 3Gb/s interface, the SSD performance is further boosted by natively supporting the next generation high-speed interface – SATA 6Gb/s.

What Does SATA 6Gb/s Mean? It’s All in the Numbers.
Native support of SATA 6Gb/s means that the data path between the host computer and the SSD is twice as fast as the previous SATA 3Gb/s interface. While some drive architectures require a trade-off between throughput-sensitive and IOPS (Input/Output Per Second)-sensitive data streams, Micron’s core design and higher speed interface provides advantages for both. The C300 SSD leverages the SATA 6Gb/s interface to achieve a read throughput speed of up to 355MB/s and a write throughput speed of up to 215MB/s. Using the common PC Mark Vantage scoring system, the C300 SSD turns in a score of 45,000 from the HDD Suite. To see a Micron C300 SSD competitive performance benchmark video, visit www.micronblogs.com.

“Hard drives gain little performance advantage when using SATA 6Gb/s because of mechanical limitations,” said Klein. “As a developer of leading-edge NAND technology, along with our sophisticated controller and firmware innovations, Micron is well positioned to tune our drives to take full advantage of the faster speeds achieved using the SATA 6Gb/s interface. The combination of these technology advancements has enabled the RealSSD C300 drive to far outshine the competition.”

Designed Using Micron’s Industry-Leading 34nm NAND Flash Memory
The RealSSD C300 drive leverages Micron’s established 34nm MLC NAND flash memory, allowing the company to provide a cost-competitive, high-capacity SSD solution. Bringing another first to SSDs, Micron’s 34nm MLC NAND supports the high-speed ONFI 2.1 standard, ensuring the NAND performance keeps pace with the faster SATA 6Gb/s interface.

The drives will be available in 1.8-inch and 2.5-inch form factors, with both drives supporting 128GB and 256GB capacities. Micron is currently sampling the C300 SSD in limited quantities and expects to enter production in the first quarter of calendar 2010.

Comments

  1. Cliff_Forster
    Cliff_Forster Now if I could only afford one...
  2. Snarkasm
    Snarkasm That comparison was astounding. To think of all the seconds I'm wasting....

    Here's hoping the prices aren't as astronomical as they probably are.
  3. Cliff_Forster
    Cliff_Forster
    Snarkasm wrote:
    That comparison was astounding. To think of all the seconds I'm wasting....

    Here's hoping the prices aren't as astronomical as they probably are.

    Yeah, we need this tech. The mechanical drive is severely bottlenecking our system performance. This video drives the point home more than any bar graph ever could.

    I wonder how these would perform against the current range of SSD's?
  4. rolleggroll
    rolleggroll I always thought that the performance gained by an SSD was minimal and only for those bleeding edge people. After watching that video...makes me want one. As Snark mentioned...prices are probably super high.
  5. BuddyJ
  6. Thrax
    Thrax
    I always thought that the performance gained by an SSD was minimal and only for those bleeding edge people. After watching that video...makes me want one. As Snark mentioned...prices are probably super high.

    This SSD will push down the prices on tons of disks which are 70-85% as fast, meaning a second or two slower. Today's performance SSDs will still deliver the results demonstrated in the video.
  7. photodude
    photodude I wonder how the reliability will hold up to an abusive writing use with a photoshop or premier paging file?

    The current standard is to use a RAID or second HD for the paging file. These newer generation of SSDs seem to have as high or higher (MTBF) than traditional drives. Some of the best enterprise SAS drives cap out at 1.5 million hours MTBF vs SSD with 1.5-2 million hours MTBF depending on the drive.
  8. mas0n
    mas0n The MTBF is an even more worthless figure for SSDs than it is for mechanical disks. What we need to know from manufacturers is their estimation of how many write cycles the SSD is capable.
  9. photodude
    photodude ^ agreed

    the heavy write cycles with paging files or database driven applications warrant needing the write cycle figures.

    Some estimates I've seen for MTBF only use a 33% write cycle
  10. Thrax
    Thrax An even more useful figure for customers would be gigabytes per day (a function of write cycles), or years of service assuming one complete rewrite of the NAND per day.

    For example:
    A 60GB SSD might have NAND with a write endurance of 35,000 cycles. This means that 60GB can be erased and rewritten 35,000 times, for a total of 2,100,000 gigabytes. 2.1 million gigabytes divided by 365 days is 5753 days, or 15.7 years.

    In other words, you could write 60GB a day for 15.7 years without killing the SSD. Higher capacity SSDs would last even longer.

    These figures may even be a little conservative given the current state of MLC NAND endurance and write combining at the controller level.

    These figures also assume that the user is a good user and has disabled or moved all unnecessary writes to the SSD: Windows Indexing Service, System Restore, Windows Defrag, NFTS Memory Usage, Date Stamping, Boot Tracing, Page File (moved to RAMdisk), Prefetching, 8.3 Names, and Superfetch.
  11. mas0n
    mas0n Do want Thrax's Windows + SSD optimization article. By Wednesday :D
  12. photodude
  13. Thrax
    Thrax Working on it, guys, but I hope to have something much larger in the works. :)
  14. primesuspect
    primesuspect No regular consumer on earth is going to disable any of those services, much less can even tell you what they are.

    The <.0001% of us who understand what that even means don't figure into these equations.

    Any useful SSD reliability metric will have to figure for the normal computer user.
  15. mas0n
    mas0n
    Thrax wrote:
    Working on it, guys, but I hope to have something much larger in the works. :)
    Take your time, I'm sure it will be worth it. My "by Wednesday" comment was only because my pair of SSDs arrive on Wednesday; I might pick your brain a bit in IRC if the Google fails me.
    No regular consumer on earth is going to disable any of those services, much less can even tell you what they are.

    Indeed. It would be lovely if OEMs would tweak Windows services on systems equipped with SSDs or if SSD manufacturers would release tools with simple GUIs to get the most out of their products without having to scour the interwebs and spend time in the command shell.
  16. Thrax
    Thrax FWIW, OCZ tapped the community to develop just such a tool: http://www.ocztechnologyforum.com/forum/showthread.php?t=49779

    I also wrote a similar script using AutoIt which disables all the above features in one swoop.
  17. mas0n

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