Testseek.de haben 140 Experten-Bewertungen der Intel 2.5 inch 510 Series SATA600 und die durchschnittliche Bewertung beträgt 81% erhoben. Blättern Sie nach unten und sehen Sie alle Beiträge zu Intel 2.5 inch 510 Series SATA600.
May 2011
(81%)
140 Tests
Durchschnittliche Punktzahl von Experten, die dieses Produkt bewertet haben.
Nutzer
(84%)
159 Tests
Durchschnittliche Punktzahl von Produktbesitzern.
810100140
Die Autoren gefallen
Hochwertige Verarbeitung
Ausgezeichnete sequentielle Transferleistungen (optimiert für SATA3)
Herausragende Zugriffszeiten
Kein Leistungsabfall bei aktiviertem LPM
Absolut Zugriffsund Störungsgeräuschfreier Betrieb
After around four weeks the Intel SSD 510 series left a good impression, although some weak spots have become apparent. The data rates over SATA 3 with a maximum of 6 GBit/s are more or less in line with the marketing claims of 500 MB/s for reading and 31...
I have to admit, the first time I heard Intel was using a 3rd party Marvel controller my stomach turned around. The previous success of the X25 series SSDs was mostly tied to the usage of Intel's own ICs, including their proprietary controller. Placin...
A number of new solid-state drives are slated to arrive over the next little while, including models based on SandForce's second-gen controller and others using the same Marvell chip as the 510 Series. Given what's coming, and the fact that we're working...
Veröffentlicht: 2011-03-09, Autor: Joe , Testbericht von: legitreviews.com
While not exactly we were expecting by carrying a third party Marvell controller, Intel has done a fine job with their custom firmware to produce a SATA 6Gbps drive that fares very well against the newest SandForce drives. While we can't say it leads...
Strong Sequential Performance, Benefits From Intel's QC Labs
Random Reads / Writes, IOPS performance vs. Newer Drives
As we mentioned earlier, the Intel 510 Series solid state drives will initially be available in two capacities: 120GB and 250GB. The 250GB model will be priced at about $584 (in 1K quantities), while the 120GB capacity model will arrive at about $284. Tho...
Let’s start with OCZ’s Vertex 3, rather than Intel’s SSD 510. Although the Vertex 3 doesn’t clean house in every discipline, it is most consistently toward the top of each workload. Intel’s SSD 510 is almost bipolar in comparison. Rather than focus on ...
The first time Intel told me it would be using a 3rd party controller in one of its upcoming SSDs I bit my tongue. Intel tried to justify the decision but all I heard in my head was that Intel was bowing out of the high end race, that Elmcrest was a copou...
IOPS performance, while decent, doesn't hold a candle to previous (3Gb/sec) generations, Price (see below)
While we were glad to see Intel step up and release this 6Gb/sec part, I can't help but feel this was a bit of a rush job. While the drive performed decently and reliably, I certainly didn't get that same feeling of performance awesomeness present with ea...
Retains 34nm flash with higher write-cycles, Tried and true controller, but not from Intel, Very good performance over legacy and SATA 6.0Gbps connections
Slower in some areas than X25-M, Still a huge gap in speed compared to latest SandForce models
The 250GB Intel SSD 510 is a solid top-tier drive, although not as high performing as the newly released OCZ Vertex 3. In the consumer space Intel has been satisfied marketing themselves as the solid choice for those buyers who are interested in very ...
Zusammenfassung: SSD prices are dropping so quickly that it makes more and more sense to have one in your PC. 120 or 128 GB versions you can find already for £90, and for less than twice that you can buy an SSD with double the capacity. It will still take a long time be...