Wednesday, November 2nd 2022

Corsair Launches the MP600 PRO NH NVMe SSD With 8 TB Option, MP600 GS Budget Models

Corsair has quietly launched two new SSD SKUs, the MP600 PRO NH and the MP600 GS. Although the model names seem similar, the two models couldn't be more different. Both are PCIe 4.0 x4 drives and in both cases controllers from Phison are used, but beyond both using a black PCB, the common features end here. The MP600 PRO NH is based around the Phison E18 and delivers sequential read speeds of up to 7000 MB/s, with the write speeds peaking at 6500 MB/s, depending on the storage capacity and this is where things get really interesting. Corsair is offering the MP600 PRO NH in capacities of up to 8 TB, but the SKU with the overall best performance is the 4 TB SKU. Random write performance is said to be up to 1.2 million IOPS, with random read performance topping out around 1 million IOPS. For some reason Corsair is offering a 500 GB SKU as well, but it offers fairly poor performance compared to its larger siblings. All drives use 3 TLC NAND, so we're not looking at QLC drives here.

The MP600 GS on the other hand is based on the Phison E21T, which is a DRAM-less controller that targets the more affordable drive segment. Here we're looking at only two SKUs, 500 GB or 1 TB, with the 1 TB drive offering sequential read speeds of up to 4800 MB/s and sequential write speeds of up to 3900 MB/s. The random read speed hits 580k IOPS with the random write speeds reaching 800k IOPS. This drive is also using 3D TLC NAND. The MP600 GS costs US$57.99 for the 500 GB SKU and US$92.99 for the 1 TB SKU. The MP600 PRO NH starts at US$72.99 for the 500 GB SKU, followed by US$112.99 for 1 TB, US$212.99 for 2 TB, US$529.99 for 4 TB and finally a rather steep US$1,074.99 for the 8 TB SKU. Both models come with a five year warranty.
Sources: Corsair MP600 PRO NH, Corsair MP600 GS
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34 Comments on Corsair Launches the MP600 PRO NH NVMe SSD With 8 TB Option, MP600 GS Budget Models

#26
evernessince
mechtechFor a single 8TB drive it's decent............only because there isn't really anything else.

For 8TB worth of SSD storage it stinks.

When one can buy eight individual 1TB drives for less than $650 with 8 boxes, and 8 mem chips 8 pcbs and 8 ssd controllers and 8 warranties for less money than a single 8TB drive, I'd be more inclined to buy eight 1TB drives just so they have to sell me 8 ram chips, 8 pcbs, 8 ssd controllers, # amount of nand chips etc.

It seems they are making us pay for capacity and for speed, which is bs, since a regular 7200rpm drive you pay for capacity only since performance is relatively equal between a 4TB and 8TB 7200 hdd.

My thoughts - hey AMD/Intel add more pcie lanes, I'd say about 64 should be good please/thanks. And mobo makers slap 8 m.2 slots on motherboards :)
End rant
Not that it fully excuses the price but it is a tad harder to cram 8TB of NAND on a 2280 form factor M.2 drive. That said, the same markup can be had on 4TB drives as well which really don't have the same excuse to point to. In the end a lot of the price markup is because they can.

Next gen NAND comes out soon so we should be able to fit 12TB in the 2280 M.2 form factor but who knows if 8TB drives will drop in price as we may just see even higher price tags on 12TB drives.
Posted on Reply
#27
kapone32
evernessinceNot that it fully excuses the price but it is a tad harder to cram 8TB of NAND on a 2280 form factor M.2 drive. That said, the same markup can be had on 4TB drives as well which really don't have the same excuse to point to. In the end a lot of the price markup is because they can.

Next gen NAND comes out soon so we should be able to fit 12TB in the 2280 M.2 form factor but who knows if 8TB drives will drop in price as we may just see even higher price tags on 12TB drives.
The could easily make 22110 drives ti accommodate that.
Posted on Reply
#28
mechtech
TheLostSwedeWeren't you just complaining that motherboards had too many M.2 slots?
I can't remember, but if I did I'm reversing course :)
Posted on Reply
#29
evernessince
kapone32The could easily make 22110 drives ti accommodate that.
The vast majority of consumer motherboards don't support M.2 SSDs that long so they'd be losing 95% of their sales. Even for top end boards support for 22110 is scant.
Posted on Reply
#30
TheLostSwede
News Editor
mechtechI can't remember, but if I did I'm reversing course :)
There was a lot of people complaining that the recent lot of motherboards had too many M.2 slots and not enough PCIe slots. I'm pretty sure you were one of them, but I could be wrong.
Posted on Reply
#31
WonkoTheSaneUK
MakaveliSo many models Corsair!!!

MP600 Gen 1 version with E16 controller
MP600 LPX PS5 version E18 I believe
MP600 Pro XT Gen 2 with E18 controller
MP600 Core Gen 2 with E16 controller
MP600 Pro Gen 2 with E18 controller

Now MP600 NH and GS
I think you missed their "Hydro X" SKUs, which come with a pre-fitted waterblock.
Posted on Reply
#32
Makaveli
WonkoTheSaneUKI think you missed their "Hydro X" SKUs, which come with a pre-fitted waterblock.
You are right I totally forgot about that version.
Posted on Reply
#33
mechtech
TheLostSwedeThere was a lot of people complaining that the recent lot of motherboards had too many M.2 slots and not enough PCIe slots. I'm pretty sure you were one of them, but I could be wrong.
With more PCIe lanes you can have both :)
Posted on Reply
#34
TheLostSwede
News Editor
mechtechWith more PCIe lanes you can have both :)
True that.
Posted on Reply
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