Wednesday, September 30th 2020

Synology Adds 3.84 TB SAT5200 to SSD Lineup

Synology Inc. launched the 3.84 terabyte SAT5200 2.5" solid state drive. Designed for Synology users requiring high capacity and reliable storage arrays, all the while sustaining high performance low-latency operations for mission critical work. With the increasingly demanding environment in storage, the SSD is created with enterprise grade endurance and reliability to help businesses and users tackle intensive workloads with robust data protection.

"Part of designing a reliable storage system requires that companion drives that can consistently sustain heavy read and write operations without any performance degradation. Our SAT5200 SSDs are built specifically to tackle low-latency and consistent performance requirements demanded by our SMB and enterprise customers," said Julien Chen, Product Manager for Synology solid state drives.
Designed specifically for Synology systems, SAT5200 SSDs are built to deliver consistently high and dependable performance, over 58,000 4K random write IOPS1. End-to-end data protection and power loss protection circuits ensure that data is safely written to the drive. Integration with Synology DSM provides improved SSD lifespan analysis and insight. SAT5200 drives are rated for 1.3 DWPD under the JESD219A enterprise workload and are intended for mixed-usage deployments.

Availability
Synology 3.84 TB SAT5200 will soon be available through Synology's solution partners and channel networks.
For more information, visit the product page.
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5 Comments on Synology Adds 3.84 TB SAT5200 to SSD Lineup

#1
CrAsHnBuRnXp
Its probably going to be $500 for 1 drive cause synology likes to overprice their name.
Posted on Reply
#2
Octavean
CrAsHnBuRnXpIts probably going to be $500 for 1 drive cause synology likes to overprice their name.
A typical 3.84 TB SSD from other manufacturers such as Intel, Samsung and Seagate could cost even more then ~$500 USD. ~$500 USD would not be outrageous pricing for the current market.
Posted on Reply
#5
Owen1982
"over 58,000 4K random write IOPS1"

That's some next level stuff there Synology - a 250GB 840 EVO had that seven years ago. Ok, ok, not sustained, but you get the point.

PLP = Potato Loss Protection?

EDIT: It seems I was too quick to jump on the Synology hate bandwagon - after googling a bit and reading a review of the small capacities in the same series, it seems as though it could not be so bad. Still a bit overpriced at the moment, but maybe that is to be expected. Nom nom humble pie :)
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Nov 27th, 2024 14:51 EST change timezone

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