WD Black NVMe SSD Review 2018

With great NVME drives, there is no doubt that Samsung is the world’s leader when it comes to the SSD category.  Today’s review, however, we’ll focus on the Western Digital, the hard drive giant.

Now, it is offering its consumer the WD Black NVMe SSD, which is a direct competitor to Samsung’s EVO.  The WD is one of best writing drives so far. At a glance, it offers plenty of advantages, including high performance, longevity and speed.

WD Black NVMe SSD Review

Price and Features 9/10

The WD Black NVMe SSD is affordable, while giving users twice the capacity versus other SSDs on the market do.  You can also get a full terabyte for its largest Black NVMe SSD.

Speed 9/10

The driving giants are almost identical when it comes to speed.  This SSD offers 2,800 MB/s of sequential write and 3,400 MB/s of sequential reads. The 970 EVO of Samsung can read data faster at 100 MB/s quicker than the Black NVME SSD does. However,   the Samsung 970 is slower in writing to disk at a speed 2,500 MB/s.

WD Black NVMe SSD is also faster than the PCIe SSD, only topping out 2,050MB/s sequential read and 800MB/s write speeds.  The latest offer has improved in performance versus the previous version is. To make this biggest improvement, the maker also engineered the first 96-layer memory (3D NAND).

Performance 9/10

Every drive comes with a Single Level Cell 3D NAND, which to date is the quickest flash memory form even if it can only move bits slowly. This SSD drive’s large portion depends on the TLC 3D NAND that is ideal for read uses or storing data; however, the WD makes use of the tiered caching that can improve the speed of the system.

Moving many photos, the SSD drive would move many data using the SLC blocks, which are dedicated to perform high volume of workload. However, a spillover is going to move to the TLC NAND read focused. And whenever possible, this drive is also going to use SLC blocks when moving the data faster with the “aggressive evacuation policy.”

The Black NVMe SSD is a fast flash memory, which it intends using at all times. It can also reduce the latency with a wide range of garbage collection and house cleaning background processes.

The SSD look somehow complicated versus the 64-layer V-NAND straightforward use, so it is what you might need if you’re looking for excellent results. Regarding random data transfer speed, this SSD is slower on the read, but then it is behind on writes even with impressive showing when it comes to sequential speeds. It also ends up slowing the drive in data transfer tests where the drive is taking longer moving a 10 GB file and folder.

Final Thoughts

Overall, the WD Black NVMe SSD is an upgraded version of the old PCIe drive, offering better read and write speeds. If you’re looking to take advantage of these features, then you might want to consider the WD Black NVMe today!

CJ Brennan

Author: CJ

CJ Brennan is a former journalist hailing from San Jose and has been in featured in high-profile digital publications reporting on some of the biggest giants Silicon Valley has to offer. An avid podcast listener, CJ is known as the office tech junkie and prides himself on staying up to date on new innovations - watching venture capitalist movement like a hawk. He’s an invaluable well of information when it comes to new products, apps, streaming services, and software as well as upcoming trends. CJ lives in the rolling hills of Willow Glen in Northern California smack dab in the heart of the major technology hub with his wife and two daughters. When he’s not fact-checking Tech Crunch articles he’s either coaching his daughter’s soccer games or blowing up his friends in Call of Duty.

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