Intel Solid-State Drive DC S3700 Review
Test Setup, IOMeter 1.1 RC
Our Test Methodologies: Under each test condition, the Solid State Drives tested here were installed as secondary volumes in our testbed, with a standard spinning hard disk for the OS and benchmark installations. Out testbed's motherboard was updated with the latest BIOS available as of press time and AHCI (or RAID) mode was enabled. The SSDs were secure erased and left blank without partitions wherever possible, unless a test required them to be partitioned and formatted, as was the case with our ATTO, PCMark 7, and CrystalDiskMark benchmark tests. Windows firewall, automatic updates and screen savers were all disabled before testing. In all test runs, we rebooted the system, ensured all temp and prefetch data was purged, and waited several minutes for drive activity to settle and for the system to reach an idle state before invoking a test.
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Motherboard - Video Card - Memory - Audio - Hard Drives -
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Hardware Used: Intel Core i7-2600K Asus P8Z6-V Pro (Z68 Chipset, AHCI Enabled) NVIDIA GeForce GTX 285 4GB Kingston DDR3-1600 Integrated on board WD Raptor 150GB (OS Drive) OCZ Vertex 3 Pro(480GB) Corsair Force GT (240GB) Intel SSD 710 (200GB) Intel SSD 520 (240GB) Intel DC S3700 (200GB, 800GB) |
OS - Chipset Drivers - DirectX - Video Drivers - |
Relevant Software: Windows 7 Ultimate SP1 x64 Intel 9.2.0.1030, iRST 10.5.1027 DirectX 11 NVIDIA GeForce 275.33 Benchmarks Used: IOMeter 1.1.0 RC HD Tune v4.61 ATTO v2.47 AS SSD CrystalDiskMark v3.01 x64 PCMark 7 SiSoftware Sandra 2011 |
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As we've noted in previous SSD articles, though IOMeter is clearly a well-respected industry standard drive benchmark, we're not completely comfortable with it for testing SSDs. The fact of the matter is, though our actual results with IOMeter appear to scale properly, it is debatable whether or not certain access patterns, as they are presented to and measured on an SSD, actually provide a valid example of real-world performance for the average end user. That said, we do think IOMeter is a reliable gauge for relative available throughput within a given storage solution. In addition there are certain higher-end workloads you can place on a drive with IOMeter, that you can't with most other storage benchmark tools available currently.
In the following tables, we're showing two sets of access patterns; our custom Workstation pattern, with an 8K transfer size, 80% reads (20% writes) and 80% random (20% sequential) access and IOMeter's default access pattern of 2K transfers, 67% reads (34% writes) and 100% random access.
We've got a bunch of numbers to share on the Intel DC S3700 series solid state drives. We tested both the 200GB and 800GB models in single drive and dual-drive RAID 0 configurations, and compared them to a number of other Intel built or enterprise-class drives throughout.
Here in our IOMeter tests, you can see the Intel DC S3700 offers flat, consistent performance across the board, regardless of the queue depth or access pattern. The single-drive configurations trailed the other drives we tested in total IOPS, but the RAID configurations fared much better, though the still trailed a couple of other setups.
Transfer speed for the Intel DC S3700 was also lower than competing offerings, especially those based on LSI SandForce controller technology.