Thursday, March 4th 2021
Intel 670p SSD Pricing Slashed Just Two Days After Official Announcement
Intel announced their 'mainstream' 670p PCIe 3.0 QLC SSD family earlier this week with pricing more in line with what you would expect for PCIe 4.0 drives. Intel announced three 670p models with 512 GB, 1 TB, and 2 TB capacities, the advertised speeds varied with sequential reads of 3500 MB/s on the 1/2 TB models and 3000 MB/s for the 512 GB variant. Sequential write speeds were quoted as 1600 MB/s for the 512 GB, 2500 MB/s for the 1 TB, and 2700 MB/s for the 2 TB model. The latest QLC memory also brought a write endurance increase of 23% and the SSD's all came with a five-year warranty.
While these drives all offered respectable performance their pricing did not reflect their 'mainstream' target market with the drives priced at 90 USD, 155 USD, and 330 USD for the 512 GB, 1 TB, and 2 TB models respectively. It would appear that retailers are taking it upon themselves to correct this by reducing prices by up to 24% on the new drives. Newegg currently has the drives listed for 69.99 USD, 129.99 USD, and 249.99 USD which represents a price drop of 20 USD for the 512 GB, 25 USD for the 1 TB, and 80 USD for the 2 TB version. These new prices make the 670p series a much more viable PCIe 3.0 SSD however, it is yet to be seen if these are the new official prices or just a discount from an individual retailer.
While these drives all offered respectable performance their pricing did not reflect their 'mainstream' target market with the drives priced at 90 USD, 155 USD, and 330 USD for the 512 GB, 1 TB, and 2 TB models respectively. It would appear that retailers are taking it upon themselves to correct this by reducing prices by up to 24% on the new drives. Newegg currently has the drives listed for 69.99 USD, 129.99 USD, and 249.99 USD which represents a price drop of 20 USD for the 512 GB, 25 USD for the 1 TB, and 80 USD for the 2 TB version. These new prices make the 670p series a much more viable PCIe 3.0 SSD however, it is yet to be seen if these are the new official prices or just a discount from an individual retailer.
19 Comments on Intel 670p SSD Pricing Slashed Just Two Days After Official Announcement
512GB is not worth buying because of TBW worries at the moment, as well as a lack of cache (less room for SLC cache to do its thing). You don't want to fill these SSDs to the brim: you need to leave lots of room for those caches + TRIM + wear-leveling.
lock upafter their TBW is exhausted, go into read only mode IIRC.www.tomshardware.com/reviews/intel-600p-series-ssd-review,4738-3.html
Now I don't recall if this is the case on all their drives but is a "feature" they've employed in the recent past.
This is pretty common on SSDs.
And if the 2TB version of PM9A1 would be available it would cost roughly the same as the 2TB 670p costs right now.
Intel is delusional if they think i will pay 70€ for the same capacity QLC with less than half the speed and endurance.
In order for 670p to be worth it it should cost as follows (or less):
500GB: <49€
1TB: <99€
2TB: <199€
/s
Again, this is a common feature in SSDs to allow the data to be moved to a new drive when the drive can no longer reliably write data. Stop spreading bullshit.