Mixed Random Performance

Our test of mixed random reads and writes covers mixes varying from pure reads to pure writes at 10% increments. Each mix is tested for up to 1 minute or 32GB of data transferred. The test is conducted with a queue depth of 4, and is limited to a 64GB span of the drive. In between each mix, the drive is given idle time of up to one minute so that the overall duty cycle is 50%.

Mixed 4kB Random Read/Write

The Team T-Force Cardea has average performance on the mixed random I/O test. It's about the same speed as Samsung's 850 PRO SATA SSD, and is substantially outperformed by some of the larger Phison E7 drives and the Toshiba OCZ RD400. The Samsung 960 EVO does poorly here, with only 75% of the performance overall compared to the T-Force Cardea.

Mixed 4kB Random Read/Write (Power Efficiency)

The power efficiency of the T-Force Cardea isn't great; the SATA SSDs that come close to its performance level do so while consuming much less power. While the T-Force Cardea was 32% faster than the Samsung 960 EVO, the Samsung closes the gap a bit on efficiency, leaving the T-Force Cardea with only an 11% efficiency advantage.

The performance of the T-Force Cardea increases slowly across most of the test, until the write volume is high enough to trigger garbage collection. The larger Phison E7 drives never reach that threshold and instead show a spike in performance at the end of the test when the workload is pure writes that can be cached and combined.

The Samsung 960 EVO starts out with slightly higher performance on the random read side of the test, but degrades as the proportion of writes increases through the first half of the test, before increasing at the end and surpassing the T-Force Cardea when it is busy doing background garbage collection.

Mixed Sequential Performance

Our test of mixed sequential reads and writes differs from the mixed random I/O test by performing 128kB sequential accesses rather than 4kB accesses at random locations, and the sequential test is conducted at queue depth 1. The range of mixes tested is the same, and the timing and limits on data transfers are also the same as above.

Mixed 128kB Sequential Read/Write

The top performers on the mixed sequential I/O test are both older NVMe drives: the Samsung 950 PRO and Intel SSD 750. Several of the Phison E7 drives and the Samsung 960 EVO and 850 PRO are all tied for average speed, while the Zotac SONIX and OCZ RD400 are 100MB/s faster.

Mixed 128kB Sequential Read/Write (Power Efficiency)

The Team T-Force Cardea has much better performance per Watt than the other two Phison E7 SSDs that performed the same, and is almost as efficient as the Zotac SONIX that performed much better. Among currently-available NVMe SSDs, the Toshiba OCZ RD400 seems to the best combination of performance and power efficiency on this test.

The T-Force Cardea's performance drops slightly early in the test, but mostly shows increased performance as the proportion of writes increases. There's no sign of the total write volume being enough to force the drive to perform garbage collection outside of the idle periods between sub-tests. The Samsung 960 EVO's performance is almost a mirror of the T-Force Cardea's, with much better performance on the read-heavy half of the test than the write-heavy second half. Samsung's SATA drives are also better on the read-heavy portions. So while several drives are tied for overall average performance, the Samsung drives perform better on the kinds of I/O that consumer workloads are mostly comprised of.

Sequential Performance Power Management
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  • MajGenRelativity - Thursday, September 28, 2017 - link

    While this drive doesn't seem too interesting, I'm very interested in your upcoming review on M.2 Thermal Throttling!
  • Pinn - Thursday, September 28, 2017 - link

    You should see it by using ~10G files and a ram drive. The Intel card SSD is much more consistent than the M.2 sticks I've tried.
  • Dr. Swag - Thursday, September 28, 2017 - link

    Did you guys change some things? Because it feels like some of the results are different, as I remember the 960 evo doing a lot better before...
  • evilspoons - Thursday, September 28, 2017 - link

    These results only include the 250 GB 960 Evo, which is the bottom of the line for the 960 series. IIRC the controller is kneecapped due to having a minimum number of NAND chips available and has no parallel processing ability... hence why reviews like this are interesting!
  • Billy Tallis - Thursday, September 28, 2017 - link

    Yep. Our initial review of the 960 EVO only included results from the 1TB model, because our first 250GB sample died during testing. The replacement has been working fine, but its performance profile is very different from the 1TB.

    The relationship between performance and capacity was the biggest reason I wanted to review this drive; it was the first 240GB Phison E7 sample offered to us.
  • mapesdhs - Thursday, September 28, 2017 - link

    It's shocking how much better than 950 Pro is over the 960 EVO a lot of the time. Other reviews show the EVO has issues with steady state performance even at higher capacities. It's why I bagged a lightly used 950 Pro 512GB recently; noticed someone else no doubt delighted at getting another for 130 UKP BIN. :D And of course, the 950 Pro has its own boot ROM (why the heck did Samsung ditch that? Such a useful feature for older chipsets).
  • CheapSushi - Sunday, October 1, 2017 - link

    There's an inherent performance and latency difference between MLC (Pro) and TLC (EVO) NAND. Even with updates, better controllers, etc, it is always there (2 bits per cell vs 3 bits per cell).
  • Dr. Swag - Thursday, September 28, 2017 - link

    Ah I see. Interesting to see such a large performance gap, though I guess it makes sense.
  • Gasaraki88 - Thursday, September 28, 2017 - link

    I wonder why you guys never reviewed the MyDigitalSSD BPX. It's one of the fastest Phison E7 controller SSDs and the cheapest.
  • DanNeely - Thursday, September 28, 2017 - link

    MyDigitalSSD would have to send one in for review...

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