Monday, May 16th 2011

New SATA 6 Gb/s SSD from ADATA Smashes Performance Bottlenecks

ADATA Technology, a leading manufacturer of high-performance DRAM modules and NAND Flash application products, today announced the release the S511 Solid State Drive (SSD), which employs the latest SATA 6Gb/s specification. With this cutting edge implementation of the latest data transfer standard, the performance of this SSD has been dramatically raised over conventional SATA II products.

The S511 utilizes the new generation SandForce SF-2200 series chip, with native support for the SATA 6Gb/s platform. Its read and write speeds are twice that of SSDs using the older SATA II specification, and in real world test simulations reached 550/520MB read and write speeds respectively, with 4K random write speeds as high as 60,000 IOPS. For consumers, this means transferring 5GB media archives can be completed in as few as 15 seconds. In actual testing of Windows 7 boot speed, the S511 cruised to an impressive 25 second system boot time.
Currently, the major processor platforms are gradually making the changeover to native SATA 6Gb/s chips. However, traditional mechanical drives are not capable of the corresponding high-speed read and write tasks. The result is that some newly-purchased computers can only utilize a fraction of the performance available when equipped with a traditional hard drive. The S511 solid state drive provides vibration-free running and low power consumption while taking full advantage of the 6Gb bandwidth transmission capability. In both desktop and laptop computers, and in a broad range of computing environments, SSDs built to the latest specification an irreplaceable advantage.

The S511 will be available in 60GB, 120GB, 240GB and 480GB capacities. For more information, visit the this page.
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8 Comments on New SATA 6 Gb/s SSD from ADATA Smashes Performance Bottlenecks

#1
Yukikaze
iWant.

Too bad they'll cost as much as three kidneys, and I only have two.
Posted on Reply
#2
Undead46
Where's the prices at?
And I don't see how it's different from any other current SATA3 SSD's... :c
Posted on Reply
#3
WarraWarra
Very nice now we are not limited by OCZ and their 90% failure rate "defects" on newegg.

Any idea about reliability (DOA), firmware upgrade, price and availability.
Their other ssd's seems to be doing well and little / no complaints from end users so far.

The 5000PE term is still greek to me.
I do hope Adata would have a easy firmware upgrade or already updated products that comes out to end users instead of all other SSD's "Achilles heal" firmware upgrade problems.
Posted on Reply
#4
meirb111
YukikazeiWant.

Too bad they'll cost as much as three kidneys, and I only have two.
sold for one kidney and a liver(if your drinking vodka the deal is off):D
Posted on Reply
#5
blu3flannel
I await the day SSD's are actually affordable. :shadedshu

Speaking of which, mine's coming in the mail this week. :D
Posted on Reply
#6
happita
WarraWarraThe 5000PE term is still greek to me.
I also have no idea what the "5000 PE" phrase means. Anyone care to elaborate?


It's nice to see more companies rolling out their SATA 3 SSDs sooner than later....more competition means better pricing :toast:
Posted on Reply
#7
OrbitzXT
When will both onboard RAID and RAID cards improve? Most reviews I've seen of the ICH10R chips and a number of cards show a cap between 700-800 MB/s, making 2 of these a waste of money.
Posted on Reply
#8
WarEagleAU
Bird of Prey
The OCZ Vertex 3 is kick ass. Seen a bunch of reviews on that and I have to say this ADATA is right there if not above it. Price on the 120 for OCZ was around 250 - 350 I Think.
Posted on Reply
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