The 845DC PRO 800 GB is Samsung's flagship enterprise-grade SATA SSD. The series features Samsungs latest 3D V-NAND with 24 layers and 128Gbit density. Thanks to this NAND flash memory the drive is endurance rated for 10 Drive Writes per Day over five years, which is a seriously high value. Furthermore this drive is recommended for write-intense workloads featuring high sequential as well as random throughput rates.
Specifications / Delivery
Model |
845DC PRO 400 GB |
845DC PRO 800GB |
Capacity |
400 GB |
800 GB |
Form
Factor |
2.5'' |
2.5'' |
Controller |
Samsung 3-core MDX |
Samsung 3-core MDX |
Memory |
|
|
Throughput |
- 530 MB/s sequential read
- 460 MB/s sequential write
- 92'000 IOPS 4K random read
- 50
'000 IOPS 4K random write
|
- 530 MB/s sequential read
- 460 MB/s sequential write
- 92'000 IOPS 4K random read
- 51
'000 IOPS 4K random write
|
QOS 4KB, QD32 (99.99%) |
|
|
QOS 4KB, QD1 (99.99%) |
- 45 us sequential read
- 40 us sequential write
- 110 us random read
50 us random write
|
- 45 us sequential read
- 40 us sequential write
- 110 us random read
50 us random write
|
Power
Consumption |
- 1.7 Watt read
- 3.1 Watt write
- 1.0 Watt idle
|
- 1.7 Watt read
- 3.3 Watt write
- 1.0 Watt idle
|
Temperature |
- Operating: 0°C bis 70°C
- Non-Operating: -40°C bis 85°C
|
- Operating: 0°C bis 70°C
- Non-Operating: -40°C bis 85°C
|
Endurance |
10 Drive Writes per Day (DWPD)
4 TB per day |
10 Drive Writes per Day (DWPD)
8 TB per day |
Warranty |
5 Years |
5 Years |
Price |
959.99 US-Dollar |
1'829.99 US-Dollar |
Not long ago Samsung have announced three new SSD series. There is for
instance the 850 PRO for endusers, then there is the 845DC EVO and last but not
least there is the 845DC PRO, which we're reviewing here. In case of the 850 PRO
the most significant upgrade concerns the NAND Flash used, since Samsung is now
bringing 3D V-NAND to the mass market, enabling a new level of reliability and
endurance. With the 845DC EVO you get a datacenter optimized SSD with TLC
memory, recommended to be used in read-intense environments. The 845DC PRO, with
it's 3D V-NAND is recommended for write-intense environments and it's also to
cope well with mixed workloads. The new 3D V-NAND that's being used in case of
the 845DC PRO features 24 layers and 40nm process technology is needed to
manufacture these chips with up to 128Gbit density. 3D V-NAND offers higher
endurance as well as increased performance at the same time.
As we already mentioned, Samsung is
recommending the 845DC PRO for write-intense environments. Therefore it's
irrelevant if you look at sequential or random read/write performance, since the
845DC PRO is consistently quicker than TLC based 845DC EVO. But in the end it's
especially endurance where the 845DC PRO excels. Samsung is claiming that the
400 Gigabyte as well as the 800 Gigabyte version are capable of withstand 10
Drive Writes Per Day over a time period of five years. Doing the maths this
translates into a whopping 14'600 TBW in case of the 800 Gigabyte drive or 7'300
TBW in case of the 400 Gigabyte drive.
Another necessary feature in case of an enterprise-grade SSD is
data-path-protection in case of a sudden power-loss. For this purpose there is
an array of tantalum capacitors ensuring data residing in the volatile 512MB
DDR3 buffer can be safely written into non-volatile NAND Flash
memory.
If we start looking for the
controller we see there is the Samsung MDX model. Despite the fact, that there
is already an MEX version around Samsung have decided to use the older model,
which for instance clocks 100 MHz lower then the newer MEX. The reason for
choosing the MDX controller might be that internal validation testing for the 3D
V-NAND has been done with the MDX version of the controller and therefore
Samsung is able to offer even higher reliability.
Last but not least let us have a quick look at the exterior. The
Samsung 845DC PRO is only available with a 2.5 inch casing measuring 7
millimeter in height. In case of the interface you get SATA 3.1. We're rather
curious to see wether Samsung is planning on releasing a SAS version of this
drive or not. This might be a move demanded by the markets actually, since lots
of datacenters only use SAS SSDs.