With their Vector series solid state disks OCZ has some very solid and well performing drives in their line-up. Today the US maker of SSDs launches the successor, which goes by the name Vector 150. Ahead of the actualy launch we received a Vector 150 with 240 Gigabyte for testing and we're quite curious what it is that the Americans were actually able to improve, on the already good, Vector drive.
Specifications / Delivery
Model |
Vector 150 120 Gigabyte |
Vector 150 240 Gigabyte |
Vector 150 480 Gigabyte |
Capacity |
120 GB |
240 GB |
480 GB |
Form
Factor |
2.5'', 7 mm |
2.5'', 7 mm |
2.5'', 7 mm |
Memory |
- MLC Toggle NAND
- 19nm
- ~3'000 P/E-cycles
|
- MLC Toggle NAND
- 19nm
- ~3'000 P/E-cycles
|
- MLC Toggle NAND
- 19nm
- ~3'000 P/E-cycles
|
Endurance |
5
years @ 50
GB/day |
5
years @ 50
GB/day |
5
years @ 50
GB/day |
Controller |
Indilinx Barefoot 3 |
Indilinx Barefoot 3 |
Indilinx Barefoot 3 |
Model |
Toshiba bla bla 19nm |
Toshiba bla bla 19nm |
Toshiba bla bla 19nm |
Throughput |
- 550 MB/s sequential read
- 450 MB/s sequential write
- 80'000 IOPS 4K random read
- 95'000 IOPS 4K random write
|
- 550 MB/s sequential read
- 530 MB/s sequential write
- 90'000 IOPS 4K random read
- 95'000 IOPS 4K random write
|
- 550 MB/s sequential read
- 530 MB/s sequential write
- 100'000 IOPS 4K random read
- 95'000 IOPS 4K random write
|
Accesstime (read) |
< 0.1 ms |
< 0.1 ms |
< 0.1 ms |
Acoustics |
no noise |
no noise |
no noise |
Warranty |
5 Years |
5 Years |
5 Years |
Price |
129.99 USD |
239.99 USD |
499.99 USD |
It has been almost exactly one
year, that OCZ released their first Vector SSD series. In our review on the
first Vector we mentioned that it is a solid drive, which performed very good
and it's even able to keep with todays fastest drives. So, what could have
possibly been improved with the new Vector 150?
First of all we want to have a look at what stayed the same. Apparently the
Indilinx IDX500M00-BC controller, which OCZ was using in the original Vector is
a really good controller, since the new Vector 150 uses the same chip.
Nevertheless there is one thing about the Vector 150 line-up which we think is
worth mentioning. Since OCZ is proud of being at the forefront of SSD
development we would have expected that there was a 960 Gigabyte Version of this
drive, but so far the largest drive is a 480 Gigabyte model.
Now to the improvements: one upgrade concerns the NAND chips. OCZ decided to
equip the Vector 150 with 19 nanometre Toogle NAND from Toshiba, which offers
3'000 P/E cycles, which is basically a very reasonable value. Other than that OCZ
is using almost nine percent of the drives capacity for overprovisioning
purposes. Overprovisioning is helping with endurance, sustained performance as
well as keeping the warranty high. Especially when it comes to endurance OCZ
offers quite an improvement over the first Vector drive. With the Vector 150,
OCZ now advertises that the drive can withstand 50 Gigabyte write per day over
a five year period, which is 150 percent more than what the original Vector had
to offer (20 Gigabyte per day for five years). This 150 percent improvement is
what influenced the name of the Vector 150, which means, that OCZ must be rather
proud of this level of endurance.
Included in delivery there is a copy of Acronis True Image as well as a 3.5
inch adapter. Meanwhile we would love to see two versions of SSDs hitting
retail: one that comes with and another that ships without bundle, whereas the
bulk version should be a bit cheaper. There are quite a few users out there in
the wild, that already own an SSD and they want to upgrade, meaning they won't
really need the accessories, since they might have bought them with their first
SSD already.