question about the the 512gb M.2 SSD inside the TC-895. Is it NVME or SATA?
CornChowder
Member Posts: 22 Troubleshooter
question about the the 512gb M.2 SSD inside the TC-895. Is it NVME or SATA?
here's a picture of it:

here's a picture of it:

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Answers
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I'm getting 1600 MB/s read and MB/s write.... if it's M.2 SATA, how is that speed even possible?
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Hi,
The part number for your SSD is SNS8154P3/512GJ and the data sheet from Kingston indicates that it's a M.2 PCIe Gen 3x2, also on the drive itself shows as PCI Express, so it's a M.2 NVMe SSD with 2 lanes enabled for PCIe.
MKF-815.3_design-in_SSD.indd (kingston.com)
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@CornChowder
The CrystalDiskMark results indicate a typical PCIe 3.0 x2 M.2 NVMe SSD performance, so it is not a M.2 SATA SSD. If you replace this drive with a higher spec. x4 M.2 NVMe SSD, you should be able to see even doubling of the performance with seq. read close to or exceeds 3,400 MB/s, seq. write close to or exceeds 2,300 MB/s.
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ttttt said:@CornChowder
The CrystalDiskMark results indicate a typical PCIe 3.0 x2 M.2 NVMe SSD performance, so it is not a M.2 SATA SSD. If you replace this drive with a higher spec. x4 M.2 NVMe SSD, you should be able to see even doubling of the performance with seq. read close to or exceeds 3,400 MB/s, seq. write close to or exceeds 2,300 MB/s.
I just realized that the two notches at the bottom of the drive confused me....
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@CornChowder
It confused me too. I would expect "M" key for M.2 NVMe SSD. This one looks like a "B" + "M" key. Maybe the manufacturer makes it useable for more PCs. Good for marketing strategy.0 -
ttttt said:@CornChowder
It confused me too. I would expect "M" key for M.2 NVMe SSD. This one looks like a "B" + "M" key. Maybe the manufacturer makes it useable for more PCs. Good for marketing strategy.
although... in daily use, I can't really tell that much difference between the M.2 NVMe SSD and the WD Blue SATA SSD that I connected inside via SATA cable.(the WD Blue got at least 550MB/s read and 530MB/s write, according to CrystalDiskMark)
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@CornChowder
x2 NVMe is just a couple times faster than SATA SSD. If you do video editing and move/copy a chunk of data more than a few GB, then the difference is significant. BTW, if you do video editing and copy massive data, it will be a good idea to get heat sink for the NVMe SSD to avoid thermal throttling.0