Conclusion

I've rolled my eyes every time SK hynix uses their "4D NAND" moniker to describe their combination of a peripheral under cell layout and charge trap flash. It seemed like a silly exaggeration of a minor advance over other 3D NAND, especially since Intel and Micron have been doing "CMOS under the Array" since their first generation of 3D NAND. But now that I've tested a SSD using this "4D NAND" for the first time, I'll admit it's not purely marketing fluff. This is a genuinely impressive product, and the new 3D NAND seems to be a very important factor. In some very important ways, SK hynix has taken the technological lead, even if this position may not last long.

The SK hynix Gold P31 at first glance seems to be a fairly ordinary high-end NVMe drive, albeit still limited to PCIe 3.0 speeds. It offers well-rounded performance but sets few performance records for this market segment. The write endurance ratings are good and it hit the market with competitive pricing from day one. Taken together with last year's release of the decent Gold S31 SATA SSDs, this is enough to establish SK hynix as an important player in the retail consumer SSD market.

But that's not the whole story when it comes to the Gold P31. The drive's power efficiency is far above the competition; it uses less power than many SATA SSDs while delivering high-end NVMe performance. Thanks to good co-design of their 128L 3D NAND and their in-house NVMe SSD controller, SK hynix has completely redefined our standards for NVMe SSD power efficiency and turned in the most surprising benchmark results in my five years of working for AnandTech.

High-End NVMe SSD Price Comparison
August 26, 2020
  240-280GB 480-512GB 960GB-1TB 2TB
SK hynix Gold P31   $74.99
(15¢/GB)
$134.99
(13¢/GB)
 
ADATA XPG SX8200 Pro $44.99
(18¢/GB)
$69.99
(14¢/GB)
$134.99
(13¢/GB)
$249.99
(12¢/GB)
Inland Premium $43.99
(17¢/GB)
$64.99
(13¢/GB)
$119.99
(12¢/GB)
$234.99
(11¢/GB)
Team MP34 $44.99
(18¢/GB)
$66.99
(13¢/GB)
$122.99
(12¢/GB)
 
Crucial P5 $54.95
(22¢/GB)
$79.95
(16¢/GB)
$149.95
(15¢/GB)
$339.95
(17¢/GB)
WD Black SN750 $54.99
(22¢/GB)
$69.99
(14¢/GB)
$134.99
(13¢/GB)
$329.99
(16¢/GB)
Samsung 970 EVO Plus $69.99
(28¢/GB)
$99.99
(20¢/GB)
$189.99
(19¢/GB)
$369.99
(18¢/GB)
Corsair Force MP600   $109.99
(22¢/GB)
$194.99
(19¢/GB)
$379.99
(19¢/GB)

Surprises like this are why I wish more SSD vendors would sample their OEM drives for review. The P31 is far from SK hynix's first NVMe SSD. It's just the first consumer NVMe SSD they're selling directly as a retail product. They have been manufacturing client NVMe SSDs for years for PC OEMs, but those never find their way onto our SSD testbed.

Some of the first M.2 PCIe SSDs (Samsung XP941 and SM951) were OEM-only products, shipping well before the launch of the retail 950 PRO. We've now seen about six iterations of Samsung's M.2 PCIe SSDs go across our testbeds (in part thanks to help from third-party suppliers who provided some of those OEM-only models for us to review), and because of that we can chart the evolution of their storage technology. But this SK hynix drive comes more or less out of the blue.

Western Digital's first in-house NVMe controllers were announced alongside a pair of OEM drives. The high-end one (SN720) was followed up by a retail counterpart (WD Black gen2) a few months later. I asked Western Digital for a sample of the entry-level OEM SN520 when they introduced that second-generation WD Black, but they couldn't sample it to me. Much later, the retail SN500 arrived and raised the bar for DRAMless SSD performance. More recently, Micron's 2200 series client SSD with their in-house NVMe controller was announced over a year before the Crucial P5 arrived.

Toshiba (now Kioxia) has been the exception; in the past few years they have sampled the XG5, XG6 and BG4 to show off new SSD tech before it makes it into retail drives. OEM SSD products are often managed by separate departments that don't have any PR budget beyond one or two press releases a year. These drives don't need aggressive marketing, but without any review sampling whatsoever we're clearly missing important parts of the  picture of the overall SSD market. It's also nice when we can confirm that the drives being used by eg. Dell aren't crap badly in need of an aftermarket replacement.

Even though a close look at recent OEM NVMe SSDs from SK hynix may have tempered the surprise of the Gold P31, it's still an impressive product. It shoots right to the top of my list of recommended SSDs for laptops and finally erases the lingering power efficiency advantage of SATA SSDs, and as a result of that we're giving it one of our coveted Recommended By AnandTech awards.


SK hynix Gold P31: The New Standard for NVMe Laptop SSDs

 

The SK hynix Gold P31 provides a preview of what how the entry-level NVMe SSD market segment will advance over the next few years, especially as the high-end moves on to PCIe gen4. The Gold P31 still retains plenty of performance for almost all consumer use cases, and will be excellently comfortable sitting in a laptop.

Power Management
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  • Luminar - Tuesday, September 1, 2020 - link

    Kapton tape works better. Those small SSDs can get pretty hot and good Kapton tape won't leave residue.
  • Luminar - Thursday, August 27, 2020 - link

    Why didn't the WD blue sn500 get included?
  • Billy Tallis - Thursday, August 27, 2020 - link

    Mainly because I only have a 250GB sample of that, and that's not a particularly fair or relevant comparison against 1TB drives. If I had the 1TB SN550 I would definitely have included that.
  • cfbcfb - Sunday, August 30, 2020 - link

    Not even in the ballpark. The read and especially write speeds are in the top 3 of ALL nvme SSD's, and this one uses half the power and makes half the heat, for just a few dollars more than the Blue. In fact, in most use cases, its faster than the WD Black for less money.
  • DZor - Thursday, August 27, 2020 - link

    All this does not matter cause 1TB drives are for long time in USD 130 - 150 range. For PCIe 3. PCIe 4 is some USD 50 more expensive.
    Except for "hi end" once like 970 Pro.
  • Gigaplex - Thursday, August 27, 2020 - link

    Why doesn't it matter? It's a good drive in this price range, and to many people it's pretty affordable.
  • plopke - Thursday, August 27, 2020 - link

    I am curious to try SKHynix consumer drives out myself. But unless you are a OEM like dell there is no support software to check firmware or update firmware , so if there is ever an issues they have no framework at all to fix anything? This drive isn't even mentioned on their weird ssd webpage?

    I mean sandisk-WD/samsung/crucial/ADATA/Kingston , ALL OF THEM have a ssd manager client and software in place just in case firmware updates are needed?
  • plopke - Thursday, August 27, 2020 - link

    PS I mean someone please proof me wrong , i actually was kinda interested in getting one of these but then I saw their product page and it was horrible and alarms bells started to ring when I couldn't find any support software at all.
  • Billy Tallis - Thursday, August 27, 2020 - link

    Their consumer SSD site is definitely a work in progress, but that's not too surprising since they only have two retail products at the moment and no real history in this market.

    I wouldn't be too worried about software. Aside from firmware updates, there's really not much point in vendor-specific tools and I wish they would all just lobby Microsoft to make decent vendor-neutral storage admin tools.

    And I don't think firmware updates are as important as you seem to think. They're pretty uncommon these days and usually don't matter much unless your system has a weird incompatibility that a SSD firmware update can fix. If SK hynix does need to push out an update for this drive, I'm sure they'll be able to come up with a delivery method. Running an extra application to give you a firmware update notification on the outside chance you ever need such a notification is a bit silly.
  • damianrobertjones - Thursday, August 27, 2020 - link

    Well, I'm not a copy editor, but i could prove you wrong if I tried.

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