Packaging
The Drive
The drive uses the M.2 2280 form factor, which makes it 22 mm wide and 80 mm long.
Like most M.2 NVMe SSDs, the Neo Forza eSports connects to the host system over a PCI-Express 3.0 x4 interface.
On the PCB, you'll find the controller, four flash chips, and one DRAM chip.
Chip Component Analysis
The flash controller is made by Phison and supports 3D TLC, QLC, and PCI-Express 3.0 x4. It uses eight flash channels and is produced on a 28 nm process at TSMC Taiwan.
The four 64-layer 3D TLC flash chips are made by YMTC, a Chinese NAND maker that is government-backed. YMTC has an exclusive 3D die-stacking technology called Xtacking, which enables them to claim the "3D TLC" title, more about the tech
here. Basically, the NAND storage array is manufactured on a die separate to the CMOS control logic die. In manufacturing, both dies are stacked with vertical interconnections. Obviously this requires an extremely high degree of precision, but yields great density.
A single Kingston DDR3 chip provides 256 MB of DRAM storage for the controller to store the mapping tables. This is a surprisingly small amount of DRAM for a 1 TB SSD; normally, you'd expect 1 GB per 1 TB.