Legit Storage Reviews

Kingston 80GB SSDNow M Series Drive Review

Manufacturer: Kingston
Product: SNM125-S2/80GB
Date: Mon, May 04, 2009 - 12:00 AM
Written By: Nathan Kirsch -
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Inside The SNM125-S2/80GB

Kingston SSDNow M Series 80GB Drive SNM125-S2/80GB

Since the Kingston SSDNow M Series 80GB drive is said to be identical to the Intel X25-M SSD, we took it apart just to make sure. The label located on the cover of the drive as being SSDSA2MH080G1GC, which is different from the last Intel X25-M that we reviewed as it was model number of SSDSA2SH080G1GN.  Removing the four Philips screws located on the corners of the top cover the inside of the drive can be accessed. With the cover removed we see a total of ten Intel NAND Flash memory chips, but that is just this side of the drive.

Kingston SSDNow M Series 80GB Drive MLC

The NAND flash memory Multi-Level Cell (MLC) components are made by Intel and have part number 29F32G08CAMCI etched on the top of them. The Kingston SSDNow M Series 80GB drive has ten of these MLC chips per side for a total of 20. The NAND chips have a black polymer coating around them, which is likely to help the vibrating tolerance of the drive as it is an impressive 2.17 G (7-800 Hz) while operating and 3.13 G (10-500 Hz) during a non-operating state. When it comes to shock tolerance the SNM125-S2/80GB can handle up to 1,000 G/0.5 msec operating and non-operating!

Kingston SSDNow M Series 80GB Drive

Removing the drive from the housing and flipping it over we can take a look at the other side, which has the Intel branded controller (PC29AS21AA F0C7651.1) and the on-board 16 MB DRAM chip by Samsung.

Kingston SSDNow M Series 80GB Drive

The Intel controller has the ability to do read and write operations across 10 parallel channels, which is tough to compete with as many competing  SSDs on the market today have fewer than ten channels. To help handle all this bandwidth Intel includes a 16MB Samsung DRAM IC is used as a cache buffer for the flash memory controller ASIC in situations where some of the data needs to be stored for a split second. This SSD also supports Native Command Queuing (NCQ), which allows drive to accept 32 concurrent commands at a time and dynamically reorder the commands for maximum efficiency. NCQ, when used in conjunction with a hard drive that supports NCQ, can increase storage performance on random workloads. Intel also uses lower write amplification ratios and has wear-leveling feature that reduces drive wear and tear more so than other drives. The life expectancy of the SSDSA2MH080G1GC, is 1.2 million hours mean time before failure (MTBF). Intel claims their Endurance Management Feature enables five years minimal useful life, which means the drive should easily live longer than the 3-year warranty that it comes with.

Next Page - HD Tach v3.0.4.0


Review Index
Page 1 - Kingston SSDNow M Series Drives
Page 2 - Inside The SNM125-S2/80GB
Page 3 - HD Tach v3.0.4.0
Page 4 - HD Tune v3.50
Page 5 - HD Tune v3.50 - Random Access
Page 6 - ATTO Disk Benchmark v2.34
Page 7 - SiSoftware Sandra 2009 SP3
Page 8 - CrystalDiskMark v2.2
Page 9 - Everest Disk Benchmark
Page 10 - Final Thoughts and Conclusions