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Crucial P5 2TB CT2000P5SSD8 (3D NAND, NVMe) Internal Gaming SSD, up to 3400MB/s

£134.99£269.98Clearance
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Had it been more like 90 or 100 C I might wonder, but given that it’s my C: drive and under heavier use that it runs a little warmer doesn’t concern me. Reply

Crucial P5 Plus M.2 NVMe SSD Review: Affordable Gen4

I find Crucial drives to be some of the best and they have a good reputation. That someone perhaps misinterpreted an acronym, or — more likely — there was a translation error from the original (probably Chinese), doesn’t concern me as much as it seems to concern you. The concept remains correct — it is Total Bytes Written, after all, measured in Terabytes. Reply My other SSD, the D: drive, is in even better shape. CrystalDiskInfo on second SSD. (Screenshot: askleo.com) Now, maybe that’s a typo and maybe it isn’t, but if I were you, I sure the h*ll wouldn’t take that chance! When I use Clonezilla to image my SSD (boot drive) occasionally I save a image to my regular hard drive about once every month or two. or on the occasion I might be doing something a bit more risky, ill make a Clonezilla image before I do it. Comments violating those rules will be removed. Comments that don't add value will be removed, including off-topic or content-free comments, or comments that look even a little bit like spam. All comments containing links and certain keywords will be moderated before publication.

Which lasts longer depends on several factors. The magnetic media of a spinning-platter HDD doesn’t “wear out” the same way an SSD does, and is likely to retain its data much longer, regardless of how it’s used. On the other hand, SSDs have no moving parts, meaning that they’re likely to last longer in physically demanding environments like mobile devices and laptops. How do I increase the lifespan of my SSD? The more you write to them, the more SSDs wear out. Most SSD manufacturers specify how many bytes can be written to the drive within the device’s guarantee. but with all of that said… while write life might give you a ball park estimate of the health of your SSD, it’s possible some other random stuff could fail on it out of no where. but assuming it only dies from writing data to it, your SSD will last a long time. but all-in-all, I don’t think it’s a stretch for a SSD to last at least 5-10 years (at least most of the name brand stuff should) and nowadays many people can easily afford to buy at least a 500GB range SSD and possibly 1TB which the write life on those is quite a bit higher than mine which means unless you go crazy writing boatloads of data to the SSD, your simply not going to wear it out for the foreseeable future. hence, just use your SSD and don’t worry ;) Reply

CT2000P5SSD8 SSD Storage Executive Utility 7.12 Crucial CT2000P5SSD8 SSD Storage Executive Utility 7.12

Conquer expectations The Crucial P5 combines 3D NAND and cutting-edge controller technology for fierce read/write speeds up to 3400/3000MB/s, pushing the limits of PCIe Gen 3 NVMe. According to the program “CrystalDiskInfo” my Total Host Writes = 5039 GB after two years of usage. That is equal to 5.039 TB. My SSD is a Samsung 860 Pro 1 TB. How can my usage be 5.039 on a 1 TB SSD drive? Thanks for a great report!!! It also doesn’t mean that once the TBW is reached, the device will suddenly fail. In reality, it’ll probably last much longer. It’s simply that the risk of failure increases beyond a point that the manufacturer is willing to commit to. I found this description of that value: “SSD Life Left. Supported by few manufacturers, this parameter represents calculated lifespan remaining in the disk based on certain equations. When normalized, it reads 100 (100%) for healthy drives to 1 (1%) for dead SSD’s. Sometimes replaced with Percentage of the Rated Lifetime Used.” — 63 hex is 99% life left, so I’d say you’re in great shape. :-) (Source: https://hetmanrecovery.com/recovery_news/predicting-ssd-failures-ssd-specific-smart-values.htm ) Reply Or is it doing the same as the Seagate 530 at 1,200 MTps ?Your guess is as good as mine. Unfortunately, Crucial would not disclose this information.

The information we’re looking for is Total Host Writes. In the case of my C: drive, I’ve written 18.5TB to the drive in the roughly two years I’ve owned the machine. That bodes well for the life expectancy of this drive if my usage pattern doesn’t change. A TBW of 600 with a usage rate of 9.25TB/year (half of the 18.5 I used in two years) would indicate 64 years of life left. Well beyond the calendar warranty of five years, and certainly longer than my machine — and I — are likely to be around. then where it shows ‘Total_LBAs_Written’, to the right of that you will see ‘RAW_VALUE’ which will have a large number there. then you take that large number and use the following formula to convert to TBW (I am just using the number my Samsung 850 EVO 250GB showed me the other day)… Micron’s replacement gate architecture combines both charge traps with the company’s CMOS-under array technology, allowing for a 30% smaller die size when compared to competitors’ flash. When compared to the company’s previous-generation 96L TLC, the new replacement gate flash replaces the polysilicon gates with metal and takes advantage of a different etching method, resulting in greatly reduced cell-to-cell capacitive coupling issues, lowered resistance levels, and allows for increased program pulse ramping. All this works in unison to provide not only lower read and write latencies and boosted throughput, but also improved reliability and endurance.

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Dude! You need to look at that second screenshot — the one for the Crucial CT2000P5SSD8 2TB (yeesh, what a mouthful!) — again, and more closely! I got a Samsung 850 EVO 250GB (which was a popular SSD for years) which has a official rated write life of 75TBW. but in the real world it will likely do AT LEAST double that before any failure from writing data to it occurs. to put that into perspective… if someone writes 40GB of data to the SSD EVERY SINGLE DAY for 10 years straight that’s still only 147TBW. it’s pretty safe to say the average person won’t be doing that level of data writing, especially not on a consistent day-to-day basis for that length of time. It’s not the amount of space used, it’s the amount of data that’s been written to it. If you write 1 terabyte of information, erase it all, then write 1 terabyte of information again, that’s 2 terabytes written. (Actually, a little more, since the erase will also write a small amount.) ReplyCrucial’s P5 Plus helpfully comes with an M.2 screw, in case your system came without one (or you’ve lost yours in a late-night carpet tragedy). Crucial also provides the company’s own SSD toolbox and some cloning software to support the P5 Plus.

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