U.2 and U.3 SSD Drives - Should You Buy?

Ғылым және технология

The PE3 series combines enterprise-grade technologies with high-performance 3D TLC and PCIe 3.0 interface, resulting in a powerful package ready for even the most demanding enterprise applications.
You can find the Exascend Range of SSDs here on Amazon - amzn.to/3dSRRgH
Otherwise, you can visit them directly for more information on the PE3 U.2 Series here - exascend.com/product-category...
Otherwise, you can find out more about availability of the PE3 Series from Exascend over on Titan - www.titandatasolutions.com/ve...
Series highlights:
Optimized for heavy enterprise workloads
Incredible PCIe 3.0 performance
Available in high-capacity configurations
Unbeatable stability and reliability
To learn more about how the PE3 series can help bring your enterprise applications to the next level, please do not hesitate to send us a product inquiry and we will get back to you in no time.
ENTERPRISE HARDWARE
The PE3 series is optimized for enterprise use with advanced flash memory management technology and a wide range of capacities and configurations.​
MADE FOR ENTERPRISE WORKLOADS
Featuring consistent I/O latency and high quality of service (QoS), the PE3 series is designed for - and excels under - enterprise workloads.
INCREDIBLE PCIE 3.0 PERFORMANCE
With sustained read and write speeds of up to 3,100 MB/s and 2,000 MB/s respectively, the PE3 delivers enough performance even for the most demanding applications.
TAILORED ACCORDING TO YOUR NEEDS
Exascend's customization services allow the PE3 series to be optimized according to your needs, including optional hardware power loss protection.
This description contains links to and Amazon. These links will take you to some of the products mentioned in today's video.
Amazon NAS Solutions - amzn.to/37oX47P
If you are as interested in data as we are, then you can find us in a number of ways. However if you want to be kept up to date with new releases, news and keep your finger on the pulse of data storage, follow us below.
Follow us on our Twitter -
Or follow and speak with Robbie directly on his Twitter - / robbieonthetube

Пікірлер: 49

  • @RealLordy
    @RealLordy3 ай бұрын

    This channel is slowly becoming one of my favorite ones for storage. No nonsense readily available good advice built on actual technical knowledge. Love it.

  • @ewitte12
    @ewitte12 Жыл бұрын

    After a drive has been out a few years I tend to find them CHEAPER per GB than the consumer drives.

  • @samsahimi

    @samsahimi

    4 ай бұрын

    i have noticed that too. Why is that though?

  • @misku_
    @misku_ Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for explaining the topic in a clear manner. It's been super useful 👍

  • @videosuperhighway7655
    @videosuperhighway7655 Жыл бұрын

    Best thing about U.2 is buying 15.36TB ssds used server pulls with 98% left for 1000. Less than a dollar tb and way more resilience ie 1dwpd especially in those 15.36tb so having 2 on an TB3 closure is a lot of high performing quiet storage something that would need a lot of devices to give the similar performance. I have 3 enclosures via tb4 cables to my mac studio. Fast video editing etc.. and performance never drops like with consumer drives that use a cache to provide the performance, then it drops like a rock when steady state,writing. U.2 commercial drives are designed to provide a consistent QOS for RAID use so no worries about drives dropping out of Raid because of Garbage collection etc..

  • @redone823

    @redone823

    Жыл бұрын

    thanks for sharing. would you be willing to share a link to the TB3/4 (en)closure you're using? edit: is it the OWC Mercury Pro U.2 Dual Enclosure? thanks

  • @videosuperhighway7655

    @videosuperhighway7655

    Жыл бұрын

    @@redone823 yes works great you can stick two in and they show up two drives.

  • @Crossfire2003
    @Crossfire20033 ай бұрын

    Great video! I've never heard of U.3 prior to seeing this video.

  • @Homes16
    @Homes16 Жыл бұрын

    Great video! Thanks for the explanation

  • @user-cq6fk5go3s
    @user-cq6fk5go3s5 ай бұрын

    For me personally I purchase used U.2s off ebay. For my use case I typically get 50 percent more capacity per dollar in a drive that typically has the the same or 50 percent more capacity per drive compared to a m.2 as well 2x to 6x the theoretical expected endurance. I go used on the enterprise HDDs as well. Out of 20 or so various drives I’ve only had one early failure, which was luckily during the return period so no harm no foul. I use Mac’s so being in the position Apple puts you in to as far as storage goes I’ve only purchased 1 U.2 to TB enclosure. Now I just use cheap U.2 to M.2 adaptors with 4 pin power connectors on the board to work on the several enclosures I have, including 1x 2x and 4X m.2 bays. Only real rub is the number of drives compatible with MacOS is fairly limited. With the exception of needing a little more power U.2s are by design simple it’s mainstream manufactures gouging for a device that for the most part is the same as before with very little needed to change the interfaces. Basically it costs them next to nothing including the larger power supply required. Allegedly Apples “fusion” drives can be set up still via some time spent in terminal. Next project will be trying a u.2 to m.2/m.2 sata combo card or even daisy chain u.2 then multi port sata with HDDs via TB if I don’t find a particular card/adapters I like. Getting closer to hackintosh time. I stick with Apple because I like the abusive relationship.

  • @meites
    @meites Жыл бұрын

    Hey I really do appreciate your no fluff format of your video, and the great content. I'm not sure you would have any experience or thoughts on this .. I'm considering converting the m.2 to a u.2 adapter on my MB, (MB limited to SATA on m.2) the stated throughput is ridiculously good, then adding an NVME m.2 to a u2 enclosure. 1: Any thoughts on real world results from that setup ? 2: Am I better off using the x16 slot with an m.2 adapter. (Not sure that will work adding the extra throughput).

  • @ironfist7789

    @ironfist7789

    6 ай бұрын

    I'm trying to figure all that out. Looking at some motherboards that have extra x16 slots, some appear to either only have x4 electrically or go down to x8/x8 if you use 2 of them or disable an m.2 when you use them.... so not totally sure on all this.

  • @AlexeiTetenov
    @AlexeiTetenov Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for sharing!

  • @igordasunddas3377
    @igordasunddas3377 Жыл бұрын

    It's a very helpful video - thank you! I wonder the following: if I don't mind lower speeds and a u.3 or u.2 drive is cheaper than say a WD Red 4TB SSD (for a NAS), will the u.2/u.3 drives work as expected except for the speed if given fewer lanes? Or will they refuse to work at all?

  • @laurentmarandet4850

    @laurentmarandet4850

    Ай бұрын

    I'm pretty sure it should not work at all. I suggest that you buy enterprise SATA SSDs like KINGSTON DC600M which are not that expensive for 3,8 TB (400 €exc VAT in Europe). I already did that in Synology rackstation.

  • @synaptichorizons
    @synaptichorizons Жыл бұрын

    Can you please provide a link to the PCIe NVMe to U.2 SSD drive adapter you mentioned in your discussion of #4 about advantages of U.2 in general.

  • @Xoman08
    @Xoman083 ай бұрын

    Thank you! It was very instructive. I see that U.3 nvme SSD are coming out. And it order to get their performance they have to go into a PCIE slot and need Xeon processor (with 80 | 112 pcie lanes or AMD threadripper with 128) and their corresponding motherboard in order to benefit from he performance of these devices. I wonder when we are going to see pcie gen5 adapter cards to either m.2 nvme or u.3 ssd devices.

  • @blendoflifesrecipes1m683
    @blendoflifesrecipes1m683 Жыл бұрын

    Hello can I use u.2 ssds in qnap Ts 464 .? Thanks 😊

  • @Spazzmoticus
    @Spazzmoticus Жыл бұрын

    I put a 3.84TB Kioxia U.2 SSD into my gaming rig through a PCIe adapter that connects to the drive via a cable. The drive installed into one of my HDD trays just fine, but even though it was right in the path of my intake fans, under load the temps would quickly get way hotter than I was comfortable with. I solved it by modifying a WD IcePack (The big metal heatsink from their old WD Raptor days!) and a using a bunch of thermal pads to conduct heat from the U.2 drive to the larger heatsink. Now the temps are basically the same as my other SSDs under load. Anyway speeds are good, endurance is great, and temps are under control. Would I recommend anyone just run out and do this? Probably not, especially since I bought my drive off ebay and thus no warranty. Was a fun project to get working though.

  • @rayw8252

    @rayw8252

    2 ай бұрын

    Ran into something similar - I can only mount a U.2 drive to my PC via a PCIE x4 adapter, and it just so happens to sit under the GPU where there's very little airflow. Drive rapidly climbs to 70+C under load, and even idle it crawls upwards. Can't fit a giant heatsink since I have < 4mm clearance between the drive and the bottom of my case.

  • @laurentmarandet4850

    @laurentmarandet4850

    Ай бұрын

    Since they are designed for servers and datacenters with cold corridors, these drives are not the best candidates for gaming.

  • @asmith1976
    @asmith1976 Жыл бұрын

    We could really use aAS6704T review. This is a possible alternative to the qnap 453e

  • @michaeldinatale3053
    @michaeldinatale30534 ай бұрын

    Could someone please help explain U.3 compatibility? I have a desktop PC that is PCI-e gen 5. I would like to get a KIOXIA gen 5 U.3 drive, there is a adapter cable that is U.2. Can I connect a U.3 drive to a U.2 adapter? Will that work?

  • @rayw8252

    @rayw8252

    2 ай бұрын

    I tried out a U.3 Kioxia CM6 drive (gen 4 drive) on my gaming PC. A startech U.3 PCIE adapter refused to work, BIOS doesn't detect the drive. Switched to a no-name brand U.2 PCIE adapter and it worked right away. However, the drive runs way too hot way too quickly (like just idling, it'll climb from 50 to 70C within 20 minutes, or a full load it'll do that under 5 minutes). Unfortunately the only available PCIE slot (gen4 x4) for it, is right underneath my giant GPU, so there's very little airflow hitting the drive. This is a serious consideration for anyone that wants to get one of these enterprise drives for their PC. After 70C it will thermal throttle and lose performance drastically. And even then the temps kept climbing above 78C and dropped from 6900 MB/s all the way down to 400 MB/s

  • @laurentmarandet4850

    @laurentmarandet4850

    Ай бұрын

    @@rayw8252 Gamers PCs have nice watercooling for CPU, unfortunately there is nothing efficient right now for the drives...

  • @rayw8252

    @rayw8252

    Ай бұрын

    @@laurentmarandet4850 I ended up jury-rigging together a mount adapter for a blower style fan that forces air across the drive. That fixed the problem completely. Still, a huge caveat to be aware of for anyone wanting to use enterprise SSDs on a PC.

  • @kallan2255
    @kallan22554 ай бұрын

    I just want to clarify this. So what you're saying is that a nvme drive is smaller than a 2.5" form factor drive.

  • @ekvinox
    @ekvinox2 ай бұрын

    Solidigm just made a 66TB, yeah TB u.2 drive...😮 and its amazigly fast and it cost only 5500usd

  • @laurentmarandet4850

    @laurentmarandet4850

    Ай бұрын

    Yes, I was considering to buy one but I think that it is a QLC which is terribly slow and not so reliable. Go to TLC to be safe.

  • @shoobidyboop8634
    @shoobidyboop86349 ай бұрын

    I want IOPS. An enterprise U.2 ssd will do 7GB/s and 1.5M IOPS. If I get a U.2-to-PCIE adapter with x4 lanes, should I expect ~ 7GB/s and 1.5M IOPS on a high-end PC?

  • @Wlad1

    @Wlad1

    5 ай бұрын

    Just benched my 1-year-old u.3 ssd (old AMD AM4 system) and Yes - 7000+ seq. reads and writes and 1.5M IOPs in 4K reads.

  • @rayw8252

    @rayw8252

    2 ай бұрын

    I tried out the Kioxia CM6 (gen 4 drive) on my gaming PC with a 13900K. It definitely pushes those numbers. However, the drive gets way too hot too quickly. Similar amount of airflow across the motherboard is enough to keep M.2 NVME drives (980 PROs) below 40C all the time. However this drive idles climbing from 50C all the way to 70C under 20 minutes. Under a full load it'll climb even quicker than that, make that 3 - 5 minutes. If you let it go past 70C, it'll drop from 6.9 GB/s all the way down to 400 MB/s, and even then the temps keep climbing - I saw it as high as 78C before I called it quits. It's the ONLY PCIE gen4 x4 slot available on my board unfortunately. And I'm not about to dump my GPU. This is in the Corsair 5000D Airflow, with all the fan slots populated...so as good as it gets in terms of airflow. without modifying the case.

  • @shoobidyboop8634

    @shoobidyboop8634

    2 ай бұрын

    @@rayw8252 What are you running that pushes that to full load for several minutes, apart from a benchmark?

  • @rayw8252

    @rayw8252

    2 ай бұрын

    @@shoobidyboop8634 the issue is, even after running the benchmark and the drive is at 70c it will stay at 70c and still gradually keep climbing even with no load on it.

  • @rayw8252

    @rayw8252

    2 ай бұрын

    And the whole point of the enterprise drive is that it can handle SUSTAINED loads that consumer drives can't

  • @be-kind00
    @be-kind008 ай бұрын

    What about u.3?

  • @BRNMLBB
    @BRNMLBB Жыл бұрын

    Why don't you reply to emails?

  • @nascompares

    @nascompares

    Жыл бұрын

    Hi! Do you contact me or Eddi through the free advice service or the forum? I do say alot on here that those are the ways to message us for help/advice? It always is to keep making content AND answer people in a first come, first serve fashion. Cheers for watching

  • @amanitamuscaria5863
    @amanitamuscaria58633 ай бұрын

    u.2 or u.3 floppy format. 40 TB floppy with a floppy drive

  • @Chris-ji8jw
    @Chris-ji8jw Жыл бұрын

    Wow, thanks for taking some of the mystery out of U.2🔥 I just want speed, for gaming. Now I know to check how many lanes are available, on the motherboard, for U.2.

  • @oobenoob
    @oobenoob Жыл бұрын

    You are wearing nothing from the waist down. I am sat here wondering if you are as stiff as a brush?

  • @nascompares

    @nascompares

    Жыл бұрын

    *removes trousers to reveal 2nd pair of under-trousers, the protect the later of 3rd under-under-trousers that every British Man wears* *Sips tea aggressively*

  • @Nobody-zq8bl

    @Nobody-zq8bl

    6 ай бұрын

    And the most British smile

  • @Yandarval
    @Yandarval8 ай бұрын

    TLDR: Enterprise gear it complicated, expensive and power hungry. Just like SCSI and SAS. Its going to take another 5-10 years before U.2/3 will be dumbed down/standardised enough for normal people. Im from the IT generation where we individually tested each drive. Then short stroked the good ones for arrays. So have had to deal with these transitions a few times. Documentation so dry, the Sahara is jealous. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hard_disk_drive_performance_characteristics

Келесі