ADATA will demonstrate an 8TB 14GB/s PCIe Gen5 SSD at CES
- December 21, 2022
- 0
ADATA has shifted the news that it will exhibit at the Las Vegas fair, from 1600W power supplies, DDR5 memory with a data transfer rate of up to
ADATA has shifted the news that it will exhibit at the Las Vegas fair, from 1600W power supplies, DDR5 memory with a data transfer rate of up to
ADATA has shifted the news that it will exhibit at the Las Vegas fair, from 1600W power supplies, DDR5 memory with a data transfer rate of up to 8000 MT/s, external SSDs with USB4 support, CXL (Compute Express Link) memory modules for business environments and storage solutions such as is the one we are going to introduce to you, the ADATA XPG SSD.
interface PCI Express 5.0powered by the new Intel Raptor Lake and AMD Ryzen 7000 processor platforms, it will enable new solutions such as graphics cards of the future (next generation from NVIDIA, AMD and Intel) or new SSDs that should already be on the market. , but they were delayed until 2023. Maybe sell the existing Gen4… you know how it goes.
The goal is to further improve the performance of internal SSDs. Although we will have to see the real differences with the current Gen4, this type of drive will on paper double the transfer speed and speed up intensive data loads.
One of them will be the ADATA XPG SSD. It will use the M.2 connector and have the manufacturer’s patented passive dispersion system. This is most likely the aluminum alloy case used on the LEGEND 960 MAX SSD, which, in addition to visual appeal, provides additional surface area to improve heat dissipation and thus improve cooling, which the manufacturer estimates to be 40%. % compared to previous models.
You already know that these types of coolers have become inseparable from SSDs, as performance has increased and with it heat generation. Specifically, ADATA promises a data transfer speed of up to 14,000 MB per second both during sequential reading and writing. A monumental performance, but as we told you, it will need to be compared to the Gen4 to see its real benefit to consumers.
The type and brand of memory used, as well as the SLC buffer and the controller used, were not specified. We know that it will be distributed in versions up to 8 TB storage capacity. It will also support AES 256-bit encryption technology and a 5-year warranty, which is already standard on SSDs. We’ll let you know when we know more at CES.
Source: Muy Computer
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