• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.

MSI and Phison Partner to Launch Spatium E26 PCIe Gen5 AIC SSD

btarunr

Editor & Senior Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Oct 9, 2007
Messages
47,300 (7.53/day)
Location
Hyderabad, India
System Name RBMK-1000
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 5700G
Motherboard ASUS ROG Strix B450-E Gaming
Cooling DeepCool Gammax L240 V2
Memory 2x 8GB G.Skill Sniper X
Video Card(s) Palit GeForce RTX 2080 SUPER GameRock
Storage Western Digital Black NVMe 512GB
Display(s) BenQ 1440p 60 Hz 27-inch
Case Corsair Carbide 100R
Audio Device(s) ASUS SupremeFX S1220A
Power Supply Cooler Master MWE Gold 650W
Mouse ASUS ROG Strix Impact
Keyboard Gamdias Hermes E2
Software Windows 11 Pro
Phison is on a mission to be the first to market with PCIe Gen 5 SSD controllers, having announced the E26-series controllers this CES. The company is ready with a branded drive under the MSI Spatium brand, the MSI Spatium E26. Built in the PCIe add-in-card (AIC) form-factor, the drive features a PCI-Express 5.0 x4 interface (128 Gbps per direction), and very likely sticks to the reference design that Phison demoed in its own booth.

This PCB is used in its client configuration, with just the controller, DRAM, and NAND flash chips; while the PCB allows an enterprise configuration with banks of capacitors offering explicit power-loss protection (the NAND flash chips offer implicit PLP). A simple copper-film heatspreader is used. Neither MSI nor Phison put out actual performance numbers, but mentioned sequential reads being "10 GB/s or beyond" (the interface is physically capable of 16 GB/s).



Update Jan 17th: MSI clarified that this is not yet a shipping product, but a representation of what such a device could be. Thus, this should be considered a concept or at best proof of concept. Both MSI and Phison are actively working together on exploring what such a retail product could be.

View at TechPowerUp Main Site
 
Joined
Nov 15, 2020
Messages
595 (0.40/day)
Location
Connecticut, USA
System Name Desktop // Laptop
Processor R9 5900X (VRM-B2) @ 180W/160A/140A | Mfg Wk03/2022 // i7-13620H 90W-50W | Mfg Wk25/2024
Motherboard Gigabyte B550 Aorus Pro V2 // Dell 006JN2
Cooling Thermalright PA120 w/ 3x P12, MX-6 // Stock (4x heatpipes, 2x Elepeak radial fans) w/ MX-6 GPU & CPU
Memory 2x16GB Ballistix 8Gbit Rev.E @ 3800C15, 1:1 FCLK // 2x16GB Kingston Fury Impact H16A @ 4800C36
Video Card(s) PowerColor Red Devil 6600XT @ C2800MHz/M2300MHz (Samsung), 216W, MX-6 TP-3 // RTX 4060 Mobile (70W)
Storage SK Hynix Gold P31 1TB, TeamGroup MP33 Pro 2TB, Seagate Ironwolf HDD 4TB // Patriot VP4300 Lite 2TB
Display(s) 1x Gigabyte M27Q, 1x MSI Optix G274, 1x Dell E152FPg // Dell AUO30A5
Case Phanteks P500A (non-digital) w/ 4x 140mm Arctic P14 PWM PST CO fans // Dell Inspiron Plus 7630
Audio Device(s) FiiO E10K-TC (USB) -> Beyerdynamic DT770 Pro (80ohm)
Power Supply Super Flower Leadex III Gold 750W // Lite-On 130W
Mouse Logitech G203
Keyboard Kingston HyperX Core RGB
Software W10 Pro // W11 Pro
Benchmark Scores https://hwbot.org/user/machinelearning/ https://hwbot.org/team/warp9_systems/
I thought the controller was like the hottest part of a NVME drive like the one part of the card that isn't cooled.
Don't worry, the NAND [which produces less heat and, when writing, prefers to be slightly warm] will be nice and chilly!

Anyway, they did say this was a concept product rather than a commercially available thing. Maybe the E26 has insanely good thermal management to where it can handle 10GB/s without a heatsink or throttling, but I doubt that. I assume they'll just give it a full-cover aluminum heatsink when they iron it out for retail and call it a day.
 
Joined
Oct 27, 2009
Messages
1,190 (0.21/day)
Location
Republic of Texas
System Name [H]arbringer
Processor 4x 61XX ES @3.5Ghz (48cores)
Motherboard SM GL
Cooling 3x xspc rx360, rx240, 4x DT G34 snipers, D5 pump.
Memory 16x gskill DDR3 1600 cas6 2gb
Video Card(s) blah bigadv folder no gfx needed
Storage 32GB Sammy SSD
Display(s) headless
Case Xigmatek Elysium (whats left of it)
Audio Device(s) yawn
Power Supply Antec 1200w HCP
Software Ubuntu 10.10
Benchmark Scores http://valid.canardpc.com/show_oc.php?id=1780855 http://www.hwbot.org/submission/2158678 http://ww
Don't worry, the NAND [which produces less heat and, when writing, prefers to be slightly warm] will be nice and chilly!

Anyway, they did say this was a concept product rather than a commercially available thing. Maybe the E26 has insanely good thermal management to where it can handle 10GB/s without a heatsink or throttling, but I doubt that. I assume they'll just give it a full-cover aluminum heatsink when they iron it out for retail and call it a day.

I mean, for product demo they also stuck it on an itx board... which would have to then be an APU build.
 
Top