SK Hynix Canvas SC300 SSD Review

Status
Not open for further replies.

mavikt

Distinguished
Jun 8, 2011
173
0
18,680
One question that pops up when reading SSD benchmarks nowadays, especially the Real world software performance, is how much the SSD's are hamstrung by the SATA interface?
I know I'll be aiming for an M.2 NVMe model when I get a new rig next year.
 

CRamseyer

Distinguished
Jan 25, 2015
425
10
18,795
The sequential write test at QD1 and QD2 show your large file transfers. The QD1 and QD2 random tests show what to expect when transferring many small files.

We like to look well beyond simple file transfers. PCMark 8's Storage Tests are traces of actual workload. The trace is replayed in the software and does a very good job representing what you would reasonably expect in a real world environment.
 

mavikt

Distinguished
Jun 8, 2011
173
0
18,680
The rational for my question was that when looking at the "PCMark 8 Real-World Software Performance", World of Warcraft, Battlefield 3, Adobe, etc. all of them results are so alike across all the SSD's that it seems they're 'artificially' capped. Is that a SATA interface bottleneck we're seeing?
 

CRamseyer

Distinguished
Jan 25, 2015
425
10
18,795
Mavikt - There is more to it than just the SATA 6Gbps bus but you are on the right track. Sequential transfers (copy and paste type operations) can be limited by SATA with large block size loads.

Most applications use small block size loads so performance can be limited by SATA's efficient overhead and Window's file system. This is why we test 4KB blocks and measure in IOPS.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.