Crucial MX300 M.2 525 GB Review 17

Crucial MX300 M.2 525 GB Review

Thermal Throttling »

Write Intensive Usage

When copying games from your Steam Library, or other very large files (>10 GB), you might have noticed that write speeds on your SSD start out at full speed and then drop considerably. The underlying reason is that modern drives have caches that soak up write bursts to improve performance. In the fairly uncommon scenario of writing data that's too big to fit into these caches, the drive will have to write data directly to flash, and it will probably juggle some out of its write cache at the same time as well, which can result in a significant loss of write speed. Newer TLC drives operate part of their capacity in SLC mode for increased performance. This test can reveal the size of that SLC cache.

Testing on this page looks at exactly that scenario. We write a sequential stream of 1 MB blocks to the drive in a single thread, like a typical file-copy operation would do, and measure write speeds twice a second. The drive is fully erased before testing to ensure any caches are emptied. Please note that this test writes a lot of data in a very short time, which is something most consumers will never do.


We see the drive run at full write speed until 42 GB have been written before performance drops significantly. The underlying reason is that 42 GB seems to be the size of the DRAM and SLC caches combined. Once that is exhausted, data has to be written to TLC flash directly, which is a much slower operation. In that state, performance is lowered to roughly 250 MB/s.
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Jan 31st, 2025 01:18 EST change timezone

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