• out of stock

Silicon Power P34A60 1TB M.2 NVMe PCIe Gen 3 SSD $79 + $9.95 Delivery ($0 SYD C&C/ mVIP/ $150 Spend) @ Mwave

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Silicon Power P34A60 1TB M.2 NVMe PCIe Gen 3 SSD - SP001TBP34A60M28

  • Capacity: 1TB
  • Interface: PCIe Gen3x4
  • Performance: Read(max.) up to 2,200 MB/s, Write(max.) up to 1,600 MB/s
  • System Requirements: Windows 8.1, 10 - Operating Temperature: 0°C - 70°C
  • MTBF: (est)2,000,000 hours - Shock Resistance Test: 1500G/0.5ms - Certification: CE, FCC, BSMI, Green dot, WEEE, RoHS, KCC
  • TBW: 600TB - SP001TBP34A60M28
  • 5 Years Limited Warranty

· PCIe Gen 3x4 interface with read speeds up to 2,200MB/s and write speeds up to 1,600MB/s
· LDPC (Low-Density Parity Check) error correction code (ECC) technology, End-To-End (E2E) data protection, and RAID engine for enhanced data integrity and stability
· Supports NVMe 1.3, Host Memory Buffer (HMB), and SLC Cache to deliver high and efficient performance
· Small form factor M.2 2280 (80mm) allows for easy installation in laptops, small form factor PC systems, and some ultrabooks
· A Fundamental PCIe Gen3x4 That Goes Further

Nice and cheap option to replace the stock Micron 1100 SATA drive in my Dell Latitude 7480. Took the opportunity to buy 2x Silicon Power 8GB SODIMM for $36 each bringing the total to $151 for free shipping.

(I marked this as not dupe because there's a current promtional offer for free shipping if order totals > $150)

Related Stores

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Mwave Australia

closed Comments

  • Never heard of silicon power, its OK?

    • OK

  • +1

    TLC Nand flash but DRAMless.

    • Sustained write is around 140MB/s. It does attempt to do aggressive recovery, but if you kept on writing, it is still going to drop to 140MB/s. So, "cost effective" grade TLC NAND.

      • Speed is one issue but also DRAMless drives have significantly shorter lifespans.

    • -2

      Dramless will never be noticed by average user take a while to fill cache, I've seen slower ssd with dram cache nand is way more important on these budget models , n they will out live warranty, but if u still have in 3yrs we'll lol. Silicon Power been around long time.

      BTW tbw 600tb is about 80gb written every day for 20yrs .

      Atleast understand things before commenting

      • -1

        Please use English on this website thanks.

        I said the drive was DRAMless, I never said it was slower (although it is, NAND is slower than DRAM so the drive takes longer to locate data, especially for writes and random reads and writes - but the average user might not notice). The main drawback with DRAMless AFAIK is that as part of the NAND flash is used as DRAM, which shortens the lifespan of the drive. All the incoherent drivel in the world isn't going to change the laws of physics.

        • -2

          Glad you understand physics, though it doesn't appear so here, as physics don't play any role whatsoever on speed or longevity of an ssd, would you like a lesson on electronic engineering in the computer industry from an electronic engineer who actually understands exactly how it works? Or would you rather take your expert opinion from Google? Your wrong in every way, but hey let's revert to the " learn English " cliche because you have no real expertise and no argument, very laughable. Reply if you must but I won't be reading your guesses!

          Hint hmb

  • Thanks. I have so many M.2 NVMe enclosures so this will do the trick nicely.

    • Recommend me an enclosure please?

      • @netsurfer is the man to ask. He'll probably disagree with my suggestions on the account of them being cheap.

        • Oh I'm looking for cheap :)

          • @Misha Bakunin: Orico ones are good. Can get them from the Aliexpress store on sale usually

      • +5

        Depends on your budget. I am assuming you are talking about USB 3.2 gen 2 enclosures. In general, there are 3 chipset groups:

        Realtek, ASMedia, JMicron. Out of the 3, Realtek is generally considered the best (yeah, I know, hard to believe). JMicron, the issue is you need to at least upgrade to the latest firmware (otherwise, simply avoid. Most cheap enclosures don't provide a firmware upgrade). ASMedia is quite popular, and is used by Samsung and other portable SSD makers. However, you want decent cooling with ASMedia chipset.

        There really isn't one that's cheap and good. My most recent purchase is: https://www.aliexpress.com/item/1005004090799287.html. The case design is subpar, but the chipset is the one I prefer. I don't like ones which doesn't use a screw to secure the SSD, but cheap ones tend not to have that design. That one is el cheapo grade. I don't recommend it now because its price has gone up (I paid less than $20 including shipping & GST). I only tested NVMe SSD on that enclosure (haven't tested SATA on it) and I used my own USB-C cable rather than the one included. I also have this one: https://www.amazon.com.au/ASUS-ROG-Arion-Aluminum-Enclosure/…

        @Clear, feel free to recommend.

        • Huh did the Ali one copy this Sabrent design

          I use the Sabrent and it's pretty good. Screwless but for my use, I keep swapping SSDs so it's convenient for me. From memory I think it uses Realtek

          • @HairyChickens: Interesting, RTL9210B as well. The Ali one has additional cost cutting done to it (slide in design). Sabrent design is definitely better.

            Did you try yours with a double sided SSD? One of my screwless ones doesn't support double sided SSDs.

    • +1

      @panpanw I like your site

  • this is bargain , i got 512GB last month for 79$ :(

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