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

Apex Storage Add-In-Card Hosts 21 M.2 SSDs, up to 168 TBs of Storage

Joined
Feb 26, 2016
Messages
551 (0.17/day)
Location
Texas
System Name O-Clock
Processor Intel Core i9-9900K @ 52x/49x 8c8t
Motherboard ASUS Maximus XI Gene
Cooling EK Quantum Velocity C+A, EK Quantum Vector C+A, CE 280, Monsta 280, GTS 280 all w/ A14 IP67
Memory 2x16GB G.Skill TridentZ @3900 MHz CL16
Video Card(s) EVGA RTX 2080 Ti XC Black
Storage Samsung 983 ZET 960GB, 2x WD SN850X 4TB
Display(s) Asus VG259QM
Case Corsair 900D
Audio Device(s) beyerdynamic DT 990 600Ω, Asus SupremeFX Hi-Fi 5.25", Elgato Wave 3
Power Supply EVGA 1600 T2 w/ A14 IP67
Mouse Logitech G403 Wireless (PMW3366)
Keyboard Monsgeek M5W w/ Cherry MX Silent Black RGBs
Software Windows 10 Pro 64 bit
Benchmark Scores https://hwbot.org/search/submissions/permalink?userId=92615&cpuId=5773
If we are talking about performance, there's no other way, if not, look at apple, even them had no other choice to use a Mac Pro, which still uses a huge space.

So if performance is what you are looking at, this drive is not for you.
iF PerFoRMaNCe iS WhAT yO... okay do you not realize there is a 32GBps cap with PCIe 4.0 x16, or are you intentionally choosing to ignore that fact? BECAUSE there is a 32GBps ceiling, you cannot get faster performance with faster drives if that goes past the 32GBps mark. So no, optane drives won't magically make it faster. Plus, a lot of folks that want this card, would like to buy this and put in a secondary machine as a NAS, or maybe they have one of the new HEDT platforms with a lot of PCIe lanes at their disposal, and want to put it in their primary workstation as maybe a data transfer drive. I mean, if I were to use this and money were no object, I probably would have twin cards, 2 pairs of RAID 0, 8TB NVMes, 168TB per card, and I would probably record gameplay in near lossless quality, shit maybe even 1440p or 4K lossless, and storage would not be an issue at all. Granted having an HEDT CPU would have so many cores you could just do x264 recording and use up all the threads, or even AV1 recording tbh... back to the original point, that's where there is a legitimate use for this, and you seem to think the only use for a card with a bunch of m.2 cards is only for risers... that's not what everyone needs or wants. You need to understand that everyone's needs can be different, and this card was designed primarily for m.2 SSDs in mind (because that's what the product pictures show).
 
Joined
Apr 18, 2019
Messages
2,415 (1.16/day)
Location
Olympia, WA
System Name Sleepy Painter
Processor AMD Ryzen 5 3600
Motherboard Asus TuF Gaming X570-PLUS/WIFI
Cooling FSP Windale 6 - Passive
Memory 2x16GB F4-3600C16-16GVKC @ 16-19-21-36-58-1T
Video Card(s) MSI RX580 8GB
Storage 2x Samsung PM963 960GB nVME RAID0, Crucial BX500 1TB SATA, WD Blue 3D 2TB SATA
Display(s) Microboard 32" Curved 1080P 144hz VA w/ Freesync
Case NZXT Gamma Classic Black
Audio Device(s) Asus Xonar D1
Power Supply Rosewill 1KW on 240V@60hz
Mouse Logitech MX518 Legend
Keyboard Red Dragon K552
Software Windows 10 Enterprise 2019 LTSC 1809 17763.1757
When talking about Optane or 'max perf NVMe RAID': The use case / application defines just what "performance" means.

If you were running caching and/or 'big data' network infrastructure, Optane is king. Optane is generally considered 'fast but overpriced' (to the gamer / enthusiast) due to its best 'values' largely being "deep into diminishing return$". The the fast access time (between slow DRAM and the fastest NAND), high 4K perf, and its extreme write-endurance make it worthwhile for scientific application/AI-MI RnD, "Big Data" and large-scale network infastructure.
Proof: Literally why/how Intel even had a market for their purposefully-proprietary (and extremely limited in Xeon-platforms supported) Optane NVDIMMs.
Also, those applications had to spec their own new interface/form-factor for NVMe: Meet EDSFF (Enterprise and Datacenter Standard Form Factor)

Intel® Optane™ SSD DC P5811X Series Firmware Version: L0310353NVMe SSDGen41.4MI 1.1E1.SNVMv16.0January 13, 2022

For on/off-loading and editing many TBs of raw data/footage, the "serving suggestion" for this product is 'max performance'
21x of Samsung's newest Gen4 M.2 NVMe drives should do very well in sustained reads and writes, while allowing enough 'room'.

I'm a fan of Optane (to an unhealthy extreme, potentially) But:
Beyond 2-4 'cheaper' Optane drives in RAID0 (for Boot or 'Scratch') or used w/ ZFS, the real cost-benefit curve 'nosedives' for most Individuals' potential uses.
-Even the 'halo-tier edge-case end-(power)-users'... They can 'tier' storage if they need it. lest they'll be spending more on storage than they probably did on their house, etc.


I think I basically said what Berfs1 said, but a different way (and from the perspective of someone that knows more about Optane than he could ever hope to put to good use)
 
Last edited:
Joined
Feb 18, 2023
Messages
245 (0.36/day)
iF PerFoRMaNCe iS WhAT yO... okay do you not realize there is a 32GBps cap with PCIe 4.0 x16, or are you intentionally choosing to ignore that fact? BECAUSE there is a 32GBps ceiling, you cannot get faster performance with faster drives if that goes past the 32GBps mark. So no, optane drives won't magically make it faster. Plus, a lot of folks that want this card, would like to buy this and put in a secondary machine as a NAS, or maybe they have one of the new HEDT platforms with a lot of PCIe lanes at their disposal, and want to put it in their primary workstation as maybe a data transfer drive. I mean, if I were to use this and money were no object, I probably would have twin cards, 2 pairs of RAID 0, 8TB NVMes, 168TB per card, and I would probably record gameplay in near lossless quality, shit maybe even 1440p or 4K lossless, and storage would not be an issue at all. Granted having an HEDT CPU would have so many cores you could just do x264 recording and use up all the threads, or even AV1 recording tbh... back to the original point, that's where there is a legitimate use for this, and you seem to think the only use for a card with a bunch of m.2 cards is only for risers... that's not what everyone needs or wants. You need to understand that everyone's needs can be different, and this card was designed primarily for m.2 SSDs in mind (because that's what the product pictures show).

TLDR: Want performance, get optanes, want storage, get hard drives, want a mix between, get this card.

When talking about Optane or 'max perf NVMe RAID': The use case / application defines just what "performance" means.

If you were running caching and/or 'big data' network infrastructure, Optane is king. Optane is generally considered 'fast but overpriced' (to the gamer / enthusiast) due to its best 'values' largely being "deep into diminishing return$". The the fast access time (between slow DRAM and the fastest NAND), high 4K perf, and its extreme write-endurance make it worthwhile for scientific application/AI-MI RnD, "Big Data" and large-scale network infastructure.
Proof: Literally why/how Intel even had a market for their purposefully-proprietary (and extremely limited in Xeon-platforms supported) Optane NVDIMMs.


For on/off-loading and editing many TBs of raw data/footage, the "serving suggestion" for this product is 'max performance'
21x of Samsung's newest Gen4 M.2 NVMe drives should do very well in sustained reads and writes, while allowing enough 'room'.

I'm a fan of Optane (to an unhealthy extreme, potentially) But:
Beyond 2-4 'cheaper' Optane drives in RAID0 (for Boot or 'Scratch') or used w/ ZFS, the real cost-benefit curve 'nosedives' for most Individuals' potential uses.
-Even the 'halo-tier edge-case end-(power)-users'... They can 'tier' storage if they need it. lest they'll be spending more on storage than they probably did on their house, etc.


I think I basically said what Berfs1 said, but a different way (and from the perspective of someone that knows more about Optane than he could ever hope to put to good use)

I'm also optane fan, of course I only have one without any raid or so, it's a shame this technology died, hopefully in the next 5 years or so, there's a new technology that surprasses it (unlikely, but who knows)
 
Top