• expired

Samsung 850 Pro SATA SSD from Amazon - 250GB ~$190, 500GB ~$310 Delivered

110
This post contains affiliate links. OzBargain might earn commissions when you click through and make purchases. Please see this page for more information.

For the absolute speed freaks out there that must have the fastest SSD from Samsung, this is slightly cheaper than previous deal posted from Amazon.

Note to take away from the Shopping Express deal but there's good savings to be had here. If you want to save some money and don't need it fast, check these savings:
256GB - save $9
512GB - save $49
1TB - save $73

Samsung 850 Pro 120 GB SATA SSD MZ-7KE128BW - approx $105 delivered
Samsung 850 Pro 256 GB SATA SSD MZ-7KE256BW - approx $190 delivered
Samsung 850 Pro 512 GB SATA SSD MZ-7KE512BW - approx $310 delivered
Samsung 850 Pro 1TB SATA SSD MZ-75E1T0B - approx $606 delivered

Form Factor: SATA
Interface: SATA 6Gb/s (Compatible with SATA 3Gb/s and SATA 1.5Gb/s)
NAND Flash: 32 layer 3D V-NAND
Warranty: 10 years manufacturer (direct to Samsung)

Note: Prices converted from US to AU dollars are approximate.
Best to use a fee free credit card like Citibank, Bankwest or 28 Degrees Mastercard for the best exchange rate.

Price History at C CamelCamelCamel.

Related Stores

Amazon US
Amazon US

closed Comments

    • These are the Pro version ;)

      I thought the same (didn't neg you, but you should show the OP the original bargain)

      • Foobar was linking to this guideline combine deals from the same merchant.

        Foobar was not saying that the posts are duplicates, just recommending that the 3 Amazon posts that the OP made this evening could be combined into 1 next time (as all 3 deals whilst different items, are from the same merchant).

        Just to clear up any confusion.

  • -1

    Damn you Amazon!
    Just bought a Samsung 850 EVO 120GB for the same price this week. Nice to see the pro's getting cheaper though, awesome drive.

    Heads up though: You are supposed to list the $USD prices in the title, this is due to $AUD fluctuations with Amazon. (You can always mention the approx in the deal description though)

    • +1

      You are supposed to list the $USD prices in the title

      I've never heard that rule. I know I prefer to see the estimated AUD conversion so I can tell if it's a deal straight away. Happy to be corrected with a reference to it in the posting guidelines.

      • -1

        I used to post Amazon HDD deals all the time, a mod nicely told me to stop listing in $AUD.

      • Nah, there is no such rule. Some people complain when you put it as USD, some people complain when you put it as AUD.
        Though, I think as the guideline suggests that the onus of proving that it's a bargain is on the poster, I think the poster, at the very least, has to show AUD conversion in the deal page and show that it's cheaper than the Australian retailers.

  • +2

    No, 'absolute Speed freaks' prefer this; http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00UHJJQAY/ref=ox_sc_act_ti…

    Industry Leading NVM Express Interface
    Random 4KB Read up to 430,000 IOPS
    Random 4KB Write up to 230,000 IOPS
    Sequential Read up to 2,200MB/s
    Sequential Write up to 900MB/s
    
    • +1

      And that's why SATA SSD's are coming down. Even Samsung are in the NVMe game now (Enterprise-only for now, that will change very soon)

      PCIE SSD, Especially in NVMe flavour are almost what SATA SSD was to HDD. They are wiping the floor with SATA SSD. That Intel you linked is the very cream of the crop right now.

      PCIE / m.2 seem to be the way it's all going. I even saw an adapter the other day with a propriety cable that allows you to store your SSD as you do now whilst plugged into the m.2 port (for people with big SLi setups not wanting to sacrifice PCIE lanes). It's all starting to change quickly.

      US Pricing on the Intel almost under $1/GB and well under for the 1.2TB version.
      We're floating around $1.30-1.40/GB here.

      Samsung are working on a >3TB version but that's an Enterprise-only. Gives us hints at what's to come though.

      • +1

        I bought one a couple of weeks ago, and another a couple of hours ago.

        Damn good price/performance for now. Also, as Intel handle all warranty directly (paying all FedEx shipping costs themselves), there will no issues RMA'ing them, should the need arise.

        • Jealous :)

  • How does Samsung handle warranty when goods were bought from Amazon? Do I ship back to Samsung in US and they shipmto a US address back?

    • +3

      Nope, shipping back to Samsung goes through a distribution centre in Sydney from memory. I've done it before, don't remember exactly where though. Samsung just ship you a new drive if it's faulty.
      And they ship it back to the return address you supply.
      It's exactly the same whether you buy the drive in Australia or somewhere else in the world.
      The only difference is if you buy in Australia, you have the option of returning it to the place of purchase and getting them to deal with it, but I've found that just takes longer. This is Australian consumer law, which does not apply to OS purchases.

      • Thanks for this. Good to know.

      • Wait, so Samsung warranty is worldwide? Does this apply to grey import smartphones and tablets also?

  • how do you get this shipped amazon wont let it

    • You've got to ask them nicely.

Login or Join to leave a comment