The Micron Company has launched M500 series of SSD
which was announced at the beginning of this year. Crucial M500 series comes in
standard 2.5 inch format and mSata and NGFF M.2 card. The M500 is based on Marvell
controller and Micron 20 nanometer MLC NAND memory.
Crucial’s new drives, which launch under the M500
moniker, are fashioned from Micron’s 20nm MLC NAND and a Marvell 9187
controller. There are 120GB ($130), 240GB ($220), 480GB ($400), and 960GB
($600) models, all of which are theoretically capable of 500MB/sec sequential
read, and up to 400MB/sec sequential read on the 480GB and 960GB models. In
actual benchmarks, the 960GB and 480GB M500 is a mid-range SSD that’s outpaced
by its contemporaries, including the Samsung 840 Pro. Its performance is by no
means bad, though — and really, let’s be honest here: The M500′s main selling
point is its ability to offer a truly usable amount of storage space at a
reasonable price. The use of MLC should mean that the M500 has greater
endurance than its TLC-based counterparts, such as the Samsung 840, too.
To squeeze 1TB into a single SSD, Crucial uses
Micron’s new 128Gbit (16GB) 20nm MLC NAND die — double the previous max of
64Gbit (8GB) per die. To achieve such a
huge density, Micron had to increase the page size from 8KB to 16KB, which
increases the die’s density — but also the latency, thus reducing overall
performance. Micron squeezes four of these dies into a single chip, for a total
capacity of 64GB per chip — and then Crucial shoehorns 16 NAND chips into the
drive, for a total capacity of 1024GB (960GB usable). The M500 is the first
drive to use the 128Gbit die, which is why no other drive comes close to it in
terms of capacity or cost-per-gig. We can expect other drive vendors to follow
in the M500′s footsteps and release 1TB (or perhaps even larger) drives later
this year. SSD prices have been slipping below the $1/GB threshold for the last
few months, but only at smaller sizes (120GB and 240GB). For a 1TB (960GB) to
drop so far below $1/GB is quite simply extraordinary. To reach that density,
Crucial had to make some performance sacrifices — but, put simply, Crucial
couldn’t care less that the M500 is 10% slower than a drive that can only
manage a puny 512GB of storage. Crucial has launched the first ever mainstream,
1TB drive at below $1 per gig — and that’s a big deal.
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