Which brings me to the end of this little digression. However, including all this in an SSD test would have two serious drawbacks. Firstly, it inflates such a test unnecessarily and you quickly lose sight of the essentials, and secondly, it is difficult to find such information again later. This way, however, I can conveniently include and link to these pages here externally in any of the upcoming articles that deal with this type of NVMe SSD. Only those who are really interested will read it. And once again as a spoiler: the MSI Spatium M450 will soon be available for review, then we will finally face reality 🙂
What can we take away from this article? Thanks to the faster PCI 4.0, it is also possible to do without a DRAM buffer (with certain restrictions) by including the normal working memory. The cost savings are not to be sneezed at, because in addition to the saved components on the PCB, this naturally also becomes simpler and thus cheaper. But the controller can also be cheaper if you no longer have to use and address the DRAM.
In addition, the controller can also be slimmed down further, make do with only 4 channels and integrate a single-core ARM processor in the controller instead of a dual-core one. And last but not least, the new 176-layer TLC is not slower than its 128-layer predecessor, but is supposed to bring many positive changes. However, we will see how this turns out later in the overall package and in practice in the test of the MSI SSD. By the way, she didn’t really make any bloopers, I can already spoil that. For the details, there will also be the full test shortly.
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