That is based on the published specs. Obviously one can measure it with the SSD in hand. Can one determine before purchasing?
I'm in the situation of copying 58 files over 330gb combined in a single transfer to a 1TB SSD as fast as reasonably possible. This is a routine procedure to update more than one computer (i7 32gb RAM) and not just a onetime process. The source is on a USB 3.2 Gen2 2x USB C port which is fast. When the buffer runs out, I've found the write speed changes drastically depending on the model of the internal SSD destination for the files. At least one model can keep a write speed of about 480 mb/s while other slow down to less than 50mb/s. I haven't found a way to check this speed in the published specs (write speed when the buffer runs out). I have found it is better to copy to a different physical drive than the drive with the OS. Formatting the destination drive had no effect, so it appears to be the physical parameter of the SSD. The models of the source and computers are all the same. The only difference is the destination SSD.
I'm in the situation of copying 58 files over 330gb combined in a single transfer to a 1TB SSD as fast as reasonably possible. This is a routine procedure to update more than one computer (i7 32gb RAM) and not just a onetime process. The source is on a USB 3.2 Gen2 2x USB C port which is fast. When the buffer runs out, I've found the write speed changes drastically depending on the model of the internal SSD destination for the files. At least one model can keep a write speed of about 480 mb/s while other slow down to less than 50mb/s. I haven't found a way to check this speed in the published specs (write speed when the buffer runs out). I have found it is better to copy to a different physical drive than the drive with the OS. Formatting the destination drive had no effect, so it appears to be the physical parameter of the SSD. The models of the source and computers are all the same. The only difference is the destination SSD.
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