Kingston introduces the new FURY Renegade SSD
- November 15, 2022
- 0
Kingston has announced the launch of the new FURY Renegade SSDs, now with a new design including a heatsink that should keep temperatures in check for maximum performance.
Kingston has announced the launch of the new FURY Renegade SSDs, now with a new design including a heatsink that should keep temperatures in check for maximum performance.
Kingston has announced the launch of the new FURY Renegade SSDs, now with a new design including a heatsink that should keep temperatures in check for maximum performance.
While waiting for the arrival of the next generation of storage solutions connected to the PCIe Gen5 interface, manufacturers continue to strengthen their catalog, especially those that use version 4.0 of the bus, the fastest on the consumer market.
Kingston’s FURY Renegade SSDs are among the industry’s elite and achieve very high data transfer speeds 7300 / 7000 MB/s in sequential read/write and up to 1,000,000 IOPS in random transfers. For this, they use the Phison E18 controller, three-layer 3D NAND (TLC) memories and NVMe protocol support.
Its format is M.2, which reigned supreme in internal storage due to its small size and the ability to be installed in the same way on laptops, desktops or video game consoles. You already know the problem with this design: it gets pretty hot. To control the temperatures, Kingston fitted a new one heatsink made of aluminum and graphene and low profile so it can be installed in any device.
The drive’s longevity is guaranteed as it will support up to 4 PBW (petabytes of data written), a mean MTBF time between failures of nearly two million hours, and comes with five-year warranty. Kingston SSD FURY Renegade with cooler will be available in four versions depending on storage capacity, 500 GB, 1, 2 and 4 TByte.
what was said Enthusiasts are waiting for the new Gen5 SSDs, but until they arrive, there will be no shortage of SSDs, the latest ones that push out the PCIe 4.0 interface or add better coolers, which are proving necessary for such compact designs as the M. two .
Source: Muy Computer
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