What's the fastest SSD drive under $700 for Windows 7?

abdu3000

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May 17, 2010
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SSD's performance is getting better and prices dropping. So I am shopping for the fastest SSD under $700.

I am using Windows 7 and need TRIM support. I am after performance and less about storage size.

Any recommendations?
 
Solution
Tom's has a great article on SSDs that ends with a speed hierarchy chart: http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/ssd-benchmark-review,3237-6.html

Any of the upper tier drives in a 240/256 Gb size would work very well and other than benchmarks, they would all perform equally well for far less than $700.

I would not recommend using RAID 0, even when Intel releases the RST driver that supports RAID 0 TRIM (currently available in beta version) -- just stick with a single large drive.

At $700 you could even get one of the best drives in 512Gb, the Samsung 830 is $702 on Amazon, but I would look for a sale.
Tom's has a great article on SSDs that ends with a speed hierarchy chart: http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/ssd-benchmark-review,3237-6.html

Any of the upper tier drives in a 240/256 Gb size would work very well and other than benchmarks, they would all perform equally well for far less than $700.

I would not recommend using RAID 0, even when Intel releases the RST driver that supports RAID 0 TRIM (currently available in beta version) -- just stick with a single large drive.

At $700 you could even get one of the best drives in 512Gb, the Samsung 830 is $702 on Amazon, but I would look for a sale.
 
Solution
Real world performance. I do software development, video conversions and photo editing. I want my computer to be very zippy. It doesn't harm to get a faster SSD than my needs. I have the money for it.
 
It sounds like you will be doing professional work involving incompressable data. If that is so, then you'll want to consider an ssd with a Marvell Controller rather than an ssd with a SandForce Controller. The SandForce Controllers were designed to be fast with compressable data while the Marvell Controllers are fast with incompressable data.

http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/plextor-m3-crucial-m4-octane-performance-pro,3178.html

I maintain the ssd database listed in the sticky at the very top of this forum section. Here is the link:

http://www.johnnylucky.org/data-storage/ssd-database.html

The database identifies the controller for each model. You can click on the links to read the technical reviews.

 
While my OS drive is a Vertex 3 240, I use a 256Gb Crucial M4 as a video encoding scratch drive and it does a great job. Cost may not be a key factor, but I got the M4 256 for only $170 -- so check the price site that JohnnyLucky linked for the best deal. They seem to go on sale weekly.