![]() The HD Tach benchmark rates show the course of the performance very nicely, but it’s clearly different in an SSD than in a conventional HDD. Here is a comparison of the CrystalDiskMark values, which will be gradually expanded with more new drives:Īnd here is an extract of the latest CrystalDiskMark ratings for a better overview, which will gradually be replaced with the latest drives: The CrystalDiskMark comparison clearly shows the differences between the solid state drives and hard drives tested so far. The following diagram shows the CrystalDiskMark results in comparison to the other SSDs and hard drives, which are being expanded step by step. Here is a screenshot of the CrystalDiskMark results (M.2 NVMe): With CrystalDiskMark you also get a balanced measurement of performance with different transfer sizes.Īs before, the P5 2TB achieves extremely good sequential read results of 2137 MB/s and even write rates of 2494 MB/s in addition to the 4K-64 threads rates. Here is a comparison of the ATTO disk benchmark results, which will gradually be expanded with more new drives:Īnd here is an extract of the latest ATTO disk benchmark results for a better overview, which will be replaced with the latest drives gradually: ![]() The bar chart already includes a comparison with some SSDs and hard drives, whereby the Crucial P5 2TB M.2 NVMe SSD takes the lead at ATTO even before the Samsung 960 Pro 1TB M.2 SSD and before the Crucial P2 NVMe SSD. These ATTO disk benchmark results are now compared for a small transfer of 32KB and a large transfer of 8192KB. Here is a screenshot of the ATTO disk benchmark results (M.2 NVMe): ![]() With the Crucial P5 2TB M.2 NVMe SSD, the read speed (green) is already above the write speed (red) from a transfer size of about 0.5KB and reaches the maximum read values of 3429642KB with a transfer size of 4096KB. These values are maximum ratings, which are different to the previously continuous transfer rate benchmarks, as this benchmark can be higher even with SSDs with a slower overall performance. The ATTO disk benchmark results gives a very good overview about the write and read rate on different file sizes. For better overview, they will be gradually replaced with latest drives: Here is a comparison of the AS SSD benchmark rates, which are gradually being expanded with new drives:Īnd here is an excerpt of the latest AS SSD benchmark results. At the time of testing, the top of the AS SSD total score in Windows 7 Ultimate is led by the Samsung 960 Pro 1TB M.2 NMVe SSD, followed by a few more SSDs and then the new P5 M.2 SSD with 2TB capacity. You can already see some SSDs compared to the Crucial P5 2TB M.2 NVMe SSD, whereby the graphics are regularly updated with new SSD drives. ![]() The comparison of the AS SSD benchmark results is extended with every new HDD/SSD test. Here is a screenshot of the AS SSD copy benchmark rates (Crucial P5 2TB M.2 NVMe Intel test system): Here is a screenshot of the AS SSD benchmark rates (Crucial P5 2TB M.2 NVMe Intel test system):Īnd here is another screenshot of the AS SSD iops results (Crucial P5 2TB M.2 NVMe Intel test system): Here is a screenshot of the AS SSD benchmark rates (Crucial P5 2TB M.2 NVMe Intel Windows 10 test system): The Crucial P5 2TB M.2 NVMe achieves 1400 points under Windows 7 and, outside of our SSD comparison tests in Windows 10, respectable 5502 points due to the significantly higher 4K 64Thrd rates! The usable capacity of the Crucial P5 M.2 by the way is 1863.01 GB. With the 2000GB Crucial M.2 P5 drive an extremely high sequential read and write speed could be achieved, which is of course well above conventional SATA SSDs and even well above the Crucial P1 SSD and the Crucial P2 SSD. For example, the benchmark program simulates a typical program start. By the way, 4K means that small 4K blocks are read or written and with 4K 64Thrd this is distributed to 64 threads at the same time. The AS SSD benchmark values provide a very good indication of the maximum possible read and write speed, the speed for smaller files and their respective access time. With the following SSD benchmark software the drive was checked and compared for the maximum performance: The operating system currently used is Microsoft Windows 7 Ultimate Edition and Microsoft Windows 10 Enterprise Edition 64-bit. The test results for SATA3 drives are compared with an ASRock 890GX Extreme3 motherboard and the test results for M.2 modules are performed with an ASRock Z270 Taichi motherboard. Let us now turn to the benchmark results.
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