Fusion-io vs Intel X25-M SSD RAID, Grudge Match Review
Competitors: Intel's X25-M RAID 4-Pack
On a side note, we're also sure many desktop end users have found themselves clamoring for a mechanical solution inside a standard ATX chassis, that can support mounting an SSD with its 2.5" hard drive form-factor, much less four of them in tandem. We discovered a solution to this problem that is both elegant and highly functional, especially given a multi-drive installation.
|
|
Capacity |
80GB and 160GB |
---|---|
NAND Flash Components |
Intel Multi-Level Cell (MLC) NAND Flash Memory 10 Channel Parallel Architecture with 50nm MLC ONFI 1.0 NAND |
Bandwidth |
Up to 250MB/s Read Speeds Up to 70MB/s Write Speeds |
Read Latency |
85 microseconds |
Interface |
SATA 1.5 Gb/s and 3.0 Gb/s |
Form factor |
1.8" Industry Standard Hard Drive Form Factor 2.5" Industry Standard Hard Drive Form Factor |
Compatibility |
SATA Revision 2.6 Compliant. Compatible with SATA 3.0 Gb/s with Native Command Queuing and SATA 1.5 Gb/s interface rates |
Life expectancy |
1.2 million hours Mean Time Before Failure (MTBF) |
Power consumption |
Active: 150mW Typical (PC workload) Idle (DIPM): 0.06W Typical |
Operating shock |
1,000G / 0.5ms |
Operating temperature |
0°C to +70°C |
ROHS Compliance |
Meets the requirements of EU RoHS Compliance Directives |
Product health monitoring |
Self-Monitoring, Analysis and Reporting Technology (S.M.A.R.T.) commands plus additional SSD monitoring |
Toggle this check-box (right) if your numbers look low...
Once we had everything installed mechanically, it was time to setup our RAID array and initialize the volume for testing in our operating system (Vista 64-bit). One small snafu that plagued our benchmark results was the Vista "Enable advanced performance" option you see captured in the screen shot above. We found on some benchmark runs, particularly with HD Tach, that a performance degradation occurred that was inexplicable. It was only after we unchecked this box, that we saw performance return to expect levels for the configuration we were testing. Re-checking the box after this had little affect on performance. This anomaly was observed very consistently, so much so that we'd suggest unchecking this box if you're installation includes an Intel SSD. We have alerted Intel to this issue and are awaiting a further detail. Regardless, we're confident in the following benchmark numbers you're about to see with the setup we had configured for testing.