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

Samsung Introduces World's Highest Capacity Enterprise SSD - 15.36 TB

btarunr

Editor & Senior Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Oct 9, 2007
Messages
47,215 (7.55/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
Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd., the world leader in advanced memory technology, announced today that it is now shipping the industry's largest solid state drive (SSD) - the "PM1633a," a 15.36 terabyte (TB) drive. First revealed at the 2015 Flash Memory Summit in August, the 15.36TB SSD is based on a 12Gb/s Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) interface, for use in enterprise storage systems. Because the PM1633a comes in a 2.5-inch form factor, enterprise storage managers can fit twice as many of the drives in a standard 19-inch, 2U rack, compared to an equivalent 3.5-inch storage drive

"To satisfy an increasing market need for ultra-high-capacity SAS SSDs from leading enterprise storage system manufacturers, we are directing our best efforts toward meeting our customers' SSD requests," said Jung-bae Lee, Senior Vice President, Memory Product Planning and Application Engineering Team, Samsung Electronics. "We will continue to lead the industry with next-generation SSDs, using our advanced 3D V-NAND memory technology, in order to accelerate the growth of the premium memory market while delivering greater performance and efficiency to our customers."



The unprecedented 15.36TB of data storage on a single SSD is enabled by combining 512 of Samsung's 256Gb V-NAND memory chips. The 256Gb dies are stacked in 16 layers to form a single 512GB package, with a total of 32 NAND flash packages in the 15.36TB drive. Utilizing Samsung's 3rd generation, 256-gigabit (Gb) V-NAND technology which stacks cell-arrays in 48 layers, the PM1633a line-up provides significant performance and reliability upgrades from its predecessor, the PM1633, which used Samsung's 2nd generation, 32-layer, 128Gb V-NAND memory.

Samsung's new PM1633a SSD provides the opportunity for significant improvements in the efficiency of IT system investments through its high storage capacity and exceptional performance. These performance gains stem from Samsung's latest vertical NAND (V-NAND) flash technology, as well as the company's proprietary controller and firmware technology.

The PM1633a SSD sports random read and write speeds of up to 200,000 and 32,000 IOPS respectively, and delivers sequential read and write speeds of up to 1,200MB/s. The random read IOPS performance is approximately 1,000 times that of SAS-type hard disks, while the sequential read and write speeds are over twice those of a typical SATA SSD. Inside the new SSD lie Samsung's advanced controller units that support the 12Gb/s SAS interface, along with a total of 16GB of DRAM. Samsung also uses specially designed firmware that can access large amounts of high-density NAND flash concurrently.

The 15.36TB PM1633a drive supports 1 DWPD (drive writes per day), which means 15.36TB of data can be written every day on this single drive without failure, a level of reliability that will improve cost of ownership for enterprise storage systems. This drive can write from two to ten times as much data as typical SATA SSDs based on planar MLC and TLC NAND flash technologies.

Further, the drive boasts a highly dependable metadata protection mechanism in addition to featuring a data protection and restoration software tool in case of a momentary blackout, which make enterprise systems more stable and manageable.

Starting with the 15.36TB density, Samsung will provide a wide range of capacity options in its PM1633a SSD line-up - 7.68TB, 3.84TB, 1.92TB, 960-gigabyte (GB) and 480GB later this year. With more choices in storage capacity, Samsung is reinforcing the competitiveness in its SAS SSD line-up. The Samsung PM1633a SSD line-up is expected to rapidly become the overwhelming favorite over hard disks for enterprise storage systems.

View at TechPowerUp Main Site
 

manofthem

WCG-TPU Team All-Star!
Joined
Jan 9, 2011
Messages
10,960 (2.16/day)
Location
Florida
Processor 3900X @ 4.0
Motherboard Asus ROG Strix X570-E
Cooling DeepCool Castle 360EX
Memory G Skill Trident Z Neo 32GB 3600
Video Card(s) RX 5700 XT Pulse
Storage Sabrent Rocket Q 1TB
Display(s) LG 34UC88
Case Thermaltake P3
Power Supply Super Flower Leadex III 750w
Mouse Logitech G900
Keyboard G Skill KM570 MX Silver
Software Windows 10 Pro
This is remarkable! :eek: I want one!
 
Joined
Oct 27, 2009
Messages
1,180 (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
Joined
Sep 1, 2015
Messages
152 (0.05/day)
Ladies and gentlemen, and the price is ............... Tada (more than ten thousand dollars of course )
 
Joined
Oct 27, 2009
Messages
1,180 (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
Ladies and gentlemen, and the price is ............... Tada (more than ten thousand dollars of course )

Well of course... its 7k for a 3.2TB SAS SSD
 
Joined
Feb 21, 2014
Messages
1,387 (0.35/day)
Location
Alabama, USA
Processor 5900x
Motherboard MSI MEG UNIFY
Cooling Arctic Liquid Freezer 2 360mm
Memory 4x8GB 3600c16 Ballistix
Video Card(s) EVGA 3080 FTW3 Ultra
Storage 1TB SX8200 Pro, 2TB SanDisk Ultra 3D, 6TB WD Red Pro
Display(s) Acer XV272U
Case Fractal Design Meshify 2
Power Supply Corsair RM850x
Mouse Logitech G502 Hero
Keyboard Ducky One 2
Still incredible regardless of price.
 
Joined
May 4, 2012
Messages
422 (0.09/day)
Processor Intel i7 10700K
Motherboard Gigabyte Z490 Aorus Pro AX
Cooling Be Quiet Dark Rock Pro 4
Memory DDR4 Corsair Vengeance LPX 3200MHZ (2X16GB)
Video Card(s) Palit GTX1080ti Super JetStream 11GB
Storage Trandscend 370s 256GB / WD Caviar Black 2+1TB
Display(s) Acer XB270HU 144hz Gsync
Case Phanteks Eclipse P600S White
Audio Device(s) Sound Blaster ZXR
Power Supply Corsair RM1000X 1000W 80 Plus Gold
Finally I can store all my porn collection and have up to 0.36 TB left.
 
Joined
Sep 15, 2011
Messages
6,715 (1.39/day)
Processor Intel® Core™ i7-13700K
Motherboard Gigabyte Z790 Aorus Elite AX
Cooling Noctua NH-D15
Memory 32GB(2x16) DDR5@6600MHz G-Skill Trident Z5
Video Card(s) ZOTAC GAMING GeForce RTX 3080 AMP Holo
Storage 2TB SK Platinum P41 SSD + 4TB SanDisk Ultra SSD + 500GB Samsung 840 EVO SSD
Display(s) Acer Predator X34 3440x1440@100Hz G-Sync
Case NZXT PHANTOM410-BK
Audio Device(s) Creative X-Fi Titanium PCIe
Power Supply Corsair 850W
Mouse Logitech Hero G502 SE
Software Windows 11 Pro - 64bit
Benchmark Scores 30FPS in NFS:Rivals
R.I.P. HDDs....
 

AsRock

TPU addict
Joined
Jun 23, 2007
Messages
19,075 (3.00/day)
Location
UK\USA
Not because of this. But because Crucial will sell 2 TB for 500$.

And you think Samsung will not match that pretty much.

Anyways this is for big company's were space and speed is required and not for people like us but one thing for sure it shows whats coming.

And as for Crucial they don't make probably any thing but the sticker.
 
Joined
Apr 24, 2008
Messages
2,021 (0.33/day)
Processor RyZen R9 3950X
Motherboard ASRock X570 Taichi
Cooling Coolermaster Master Liquid ML240L RGB
Memory 64GB DDR4 3200 (4x16GB)
Video Card(s) RTX 3050
Storage Samsung 2TB SSD
Display(s) Asus VE276Q, VE278Q and VK278Q triple 27” 1920x1080
Case Zulman MS800
Audio Device(s) On Board
Power Supply Seasonic 650W
VR HMD Oculus Rift, Oculus Quest V1, Oculus Quest 2
Software Windows 11 64bit
Not because of this. But because Crucial will sell 2 TB for 500$.
1TB SSDs for about or under ~$200 USD is enough to get a lot of consumer interest and that is already here. Price per gig could be better though.

Still there are issues that many consumers may have which would make conventional HDD more favorable depending on the situation. For example I would consider a 4TB, 6TB or 8TB HDD more economical and useful (then a 2TB SDD at ~$500 USD) in my Server 2012 Essentials box or Synology NAS. I need the capacity and while SSDs can support TRIM in a RAID 0 array (scary RAID) with Intel controller I've heard of no such support for other implementations of RAID that have redundantcy. If the garbage collection is so good that it doesn't really need TRIM over time then that is great but if not then that is a problem.

What I think this shows though is that an SSD can easily break new ground with respect to capacity that conventional HDDs struggle to reach,....struggle and fail, helium filled of no.
 
Joined
Mar 11, 2007
Messages
702 (0.11/day)
Processor Intel Core i5 4690K
Motherboard AsRock Z97 Extreme4
Cooling Hyper 212 Evo
Memory 16GB
Video Card(s) R9 Nano
Storage 256GB SATA SSD 2TB WD Blue
Display(s) 1920x1080
Case Cooler Master Elite 130
Power Supply CX650M
Software Argh, Windows 10. I hated Windows 7. I hate Windows 10 more. Give me back XP!!!
Not because of this. But because Crucial will sell 2 TB for 500$.

We won't see most people switching to SSDs until a 1TB is under $100.

And we won't see a large shift to SSDs until SSDs are basically as cheap as HDDs so the major computer manufacturers like Dell and HP start putting SSDs in their large volume inexpensive products.

Until that happens, SSDs will still be mostly an enthusiast product, not mainstream.
 

rtwjunkie

PC Gaming Enthusiast
Supporter
Joined
Jul 25, 2008
Messages
13,987 (2.35/day)
Location
Louisiana
Processor Core i9-9900k
Motherboard ASRock Z390 Phantom Gaming 6
Cooling All air: 2x140mm Fractal exhaust; 3x 140mm Cougar Intake; Enermax ETS-T50 Black CPU cooler
Memory 32GB (2x16) Mushkin Redline DDR-4 3200
Video Card(s) ASUS RTX 4070 Ti Super OC 16GB
Storage 1x 1TB MX500 (OS); 2x 6TB WD Black; 1x 2TB MX500; 1x 1TB BX500 SSD; 1x 6TB WD Blue storage (eSATA)
Display(s) Infievo 27" 165Hz @ 2560 x 1440
Case Fractal Design Define R4 Black -windowed
Audio Device(s) Soundblaster Z
Power Supply Seasonic Focus GX-1000 Gold
Mouse Coolermaster Sentinel III (large palm grip!)
Keyboard Logitech G610 Orion mechanical (Cherry Brown switches)
Software Windows 10 Pro 64-bit (Start10 & Fences 3.0 installed)
And as for Crucial they don't make probably any thing but the sticker.

Actually, they do. Crucial is owned by Micron, who makes their RAM and SSD's.
 
Joined
Oct 27, 2009
Messages
1,180 (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
Actually, they do. Crucial is owned by Micron, who makes their RAM and SSD's.

Yeah... Plextor on the other hand...
Just takes Crucial/micron products and fixes the fw.
 
Joined
Feb 18, 2006
Messages
5,147 (0.75/day)
Location
AZ
System Name Thought I'd be done with this by now
Processor i7 11700k 8/16
Motherboard MSI Z590 Pro Wifi
Cooling Be Quiet Dark Rock Pro 4, 9x aigo AR12
Memory 32GB GSkill TridentZ Neo DDR4-4000 CL18-22-22-42
Video Card(s) MSI Ventus 2x Geforce RTX 3070
Storage 1TB MX300 M.2 OS + Games, + cloud mostly
Display(s) Samsung 40" 4k (TV)
Case Lian Li PC-011 Dynamic EVO Black
Audio Device(s) onboard HD -> Yamaha 5.1
Power Supply EVGA 850 GQ
Mouse Logitech wireless
Keyboard same
VR HMD nah
Software Windows 10
Benchmark Scores no one cares anymore lols
Joined
Sep 1, 2015
Messages
152 (0.05/day)
Well of course... its 7k for a 3.2TB SAS SSD

Not because of this. But because Crucial will sell 2 TB for 500$.

And you think Samsung will not match that pretty much.

Anyways this is for big company's were space and speed is required and not for people like us but one thing for sure it shows whats coming.

And as for Crucial they don't make probably any thing but the sticker.

1TB SSDs for about or under ~$200 USD is enough to get a lot of consumer interest and that is already here. Price per gig could be better though.

Still there are issues that many consumers may have which would make conventional HDD more favorable depending on the situation. For example I would consider a 4TB, 6TB or 8TB HDD more economical and useful (then a 2TB SDD at ~$500 USD) in my Server 2012 Essentials box or Synology NAS. I need the capacity and while SSDs can support TRIM in a RAID 0 array (scary RAID) with Intel controller I've heard of no such support for other implementations of RAID that have redundantcy. If the garbage collection is so good that it doesn't really need TRIM over time then that is great but if not then that is a problem.

What I think this shows though is that an SSD can easily break new ground with respect to capacity that conventional HDDs struggle to reach,....struggle and fail, helium filled of no.

We won't see most people switching to SSDs until a 1TB is under $100.

And we won't see a large shift to SSDs until SSDs are basically as cheap as HDDs so the major computer manufacturers like Dell and HP start putting SSDs in their large volume inexpensive products.

Until that happens, SSDs will still be mostly an enthusiast product, not mainstream.
OK some of us were so optimistic and some were too harsh. Truth is somewhere between. When the SSD came some of us were cheering for the new technology and some were causes, then when dust settles and we started seeing reliability and price issues and some became sarcastic. If we take an objective look we see that the technology is moving away from mechanical part except for water blocks which we can't get enough of. So this technology needs sometime to mature and get more reliable and cost less. I think we will see single chip and single DIE SSDs in the future and that may help to solve part of cost problem and maybe we will see self activating chips that can reactivate the dead spots and solve reliability issues. Whether SSD will replace HHD or coexist that is something we will know in the next five years.
 

AsRock

TPU addict
Joined
Jun 23, 2007
Messages
19,075 (3.00/day)
Location
UK\USA
Actually, they do. Crucial is owned by Micron, who makes their RAM and SSD's.

Was not aware that Crucial was owned by Micron ^^, fuckity fck must of missed that one and thanks for the update.

Well that's all good i have always had a soft spot for Micron, they done some of the best DDR ram chips.

:oops:
 
Joined
Oct 27, 2009
Messages
1,180 (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
Was not aware that Crucial was owned by Micron ^^, fuckity fck must of missed that one and thanks for the update.

Well that's all good i have always had a soft spot for Micron, they done some of the best DDR ram chips.

:oops:
Noooo nonono

Crucial is the consumer front of micron.
Micron and crucial makes shitty ass firmware...
The warm spot in your heart is entirely undeserved.
 

rtwjunkie

PC Gaming Enthusiast
Supporter
Joined
Jul 25, 2008
Messages
13,987 (2.35/day)
Location
Louisiana
Processor Core i9-9900k
Motherboard ASRock Z390 Phantom Gaming 6
Cooling All air: 2x140mm Fractal exhaust; 3x 140mm Cougar Intake; Enermax ETS-T50 Black CPU cooler
Memory 32GB (2x16) Mushkin Redline DDR-4 3200
Video Card(s) ASUS RTX 4070 Ti Super OC 16GB
Storage 1x 1TB MX500 (OS); 2x 6TB WD Black; 1x 2TB MX500; 1x 1TB BX500 SSD; 1x 6TB WD Blue storage (eSATA)
Display(s) Infievo 27" 165Hz @ 2560 x 1440
Case Fractal Design Define R4 Black -windowed
Audio Device(s) Soundblaster Z
Power Supply Seasonic Focus GX-1000 Gold
Mouse Coolermaster Sentinel III (large palm grip!)
Keyboard Logitech G610 Orion mechanical (Cherry Brown switches)
Software Windows 10 Pro 64-bit (Start10 & Fences 3.0 installed)
Micron and crucial makes shitty ass firmware...

Wow, I was not aware of that. I should quickly replace my 4 different M500 SSD's that have been operating flawlessly for well over a year. And while I'm at it, my nearly 3 year old M4 must be about to implode....better replace that too. :rolleyes:
 
Joined
Oct 27, 2009
Messages
1,180 (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
Wow, I was not aware of that. I should quickly replace my 4 different M500 SSD's that have been operating flawlessly for well over a year. And while I'm at it, my nearly 3 year old M4 must be about to implode....better replace that too. :rolleyes:

Only if you do real work. Those handle read intensive workloads fine, and burst writes.
Micron tries to sell them for enterprise workloads and they are shit for them.

The gc cycle for your m500 there... checks for idle over a 3 minute span by looking at disk usage at 3 points... if it is idle at those 3 points it has to have been idle for the entire time in-between... and kicks off gc that drops you to <100 iops.
So yes, shitty ass firmware.

The hardware is fine, plextor proves that... Micron just needs to buy them to replace their stock fw teams.
 

rtwjunkie

PC Gaming Enthusiast
Supporter
Joined
Jul 25, 2008
Messages
13,987 (2.35/day)
Location
Louisiana
Processor Core i9-9900k
Motherboard ASRock Z390 Phantom Gaming 6
Cooling All air: 2x140mm Fractal exhaust; 3x 140mm Cougar Intake; Enermax ETS-T50 Black CPU cooler
Memory 32GB (2x16) Mushkin Redline DDR-4 3200
Video Card(s) ASUS RTX 4070 Ti Super OC 16GB
Storage 1x 1TB MX500 (OS); 2x 6TB WD Black; 1x 2TB MX500; 1x 1TB BX500 SSD; 1x 6TB WD Blue storage (eSATA)
Display(s) Infievo 27" 165Hz @ 2560 x 1440
Case Fractal Design Define R4 Black -windowed
Audio Device(s) Soundblaster Z
Power Supply Seasonic Focus GX-1000 Gold
Mouse Coolermaster Sentinel III (large palm grip!)
Keyboard Logitech G610 Orion mechanical (Cherry Brown switches)
Software Windows 10 Pro 64-bit (Start10 & Fences 3.0 installed)
Like I said, no abnormal wear, and no out of spec speeds, nor abnormal specs. Your sky is falling prediction might hold weight if their was widespread news about this like with the Samsung debacle, or the long sandforce saga. I'm sorry, but one guy in the back of the auditorium yelling out "you suck" at crucial is just not credible.

I have seen no personal evidence in my own use or heard of any problems from people I have equipped with Crucials.
 
Joined
Oct 27, 2009
Messages
1,180 (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
Like I said, no abnormal wear, and no out of spec speeds, nor abnormal specs. Your sky is falling prediction might hold weight if their was widespread news about this like with the Samsung debacle, or the long sandforce saga. I'm sorry, but one guy in the back of the auditorium yelling out "you suck" at crucial is just not credible.

I have seen no personal evidence in my own use or heard of any problems from people I have equipped with Crucials.

Lol... without traces you don't know that... You are simply John Snow... being blind to something doesn't change its existence.

And I told you your workload is not hard enough to expose it.
I didn't tell you to get rid of them... I told you they write shitty fw that is not suitable for anything other than a read workload with burst writes.... which consequently is all consumer drives are expected of most of the time.

If you thrash them... they will get fucky... just go look at the anandtech benches if you want public knowledge... but you seem to deal in anecdote not facts.

I will not use them personally because of working with then b2b... I do not, not recommend them for consumer workloads... they are cheap adequate READ drives, that simply cannot handle being thrashed and are not backed by the company that sells them.

I never said the sky is falling... I just know more about the inner workings of your own drives than you do.
 
Last edited:
Top