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Kingston SSDNow V+ 64GB SSD review.

by Tarinder Sandhu on 19 October 2009, 10:00 3.5

Tags: SSDNow V+ 64GB, Kingston

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Pragmatic testing

Drive test - 6.15GB large-file read speed
Time in seconds, lower is better
Crucial CT64M225 SSD 64GBSamsung HD103UJ 1TBCorsair X128 SSD 128GBKingston SSDNow V+ 64GB
65.174.264.565


In this instance we're manually transferring files from and to the host Seagate 500GB mechanical hard drive.

Drive test - 6.15GB large-file write speed
Time in seconds, lower is better
Crucial CT64M225 SSD 64GBSamsung HD103UJ 1TBCorsair X128 SSD 128GBKingston SSDNow V+ 64GB
6573.864.864.1


There's nothing much in it with respect to SSDs, with the 1TB drive just a little behind. The lack of performance delta is caused by the read/write speed of the host drive.

Drive test - 6.15GB large-file write speed (SSD)
Time in seconds, lower is better
Crucial CT64M225 SSD 64GBKingston SSDNow V+ 64GB
62.948.4


What we've done here is conduct the same test but with the Corsair X128 as the host drive. Moving files from the Corsair to the Crucial takes over a minute, averaging around 97MB/s, but the speed increases when using the Kingston as the recipient drive, coming in at 138MB/s. The results corroborate the CrystalDiskMark findings.

Drive test - 123MB small-file write speed
Time in seconds, lower is better
Crucial CT64M225 SSD 64GBSamsung HD103UJ 1TBCorsair X128 SSD 128GBKingston SSDNow V+ 64GB
2.94.92.62.4


Drive test - 123MB small-file read speed
Time in seconds, lower is better
Crucial CT64M225 SSD 64GBSamsung HD103UJ 1TBCorsair X128 SSD 128GBKingston SSDNow V+ 64GB
1.73.11.62.7


Disk torture - writing 25,868 files (3.72GB) back onto drive
Time in seconds, lower is better
Crucial CT64M225 SSD 64GBSamsung HD103UJ 1TBCorsair X128 SSD 128GBKingston SSDNow V+ 64GB
114.5119.696.2100.3


Copying a folder containing nearly 26,000 files back onto the drive(s) stresses almost every facet of performance. The Corsair X128 is the fastest, completing the task well under two minutes. Surprisingly, the 64GB Crucial isn't much faster than a 1TB mechanical drive. The cases where it would be, in a small-file random read/write scenario, aren't hugely common in the client environment.