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Reddit mentions of Samsung 850 PRO - 512GB - 2.5-Inch SATA III Internal SSD (MZ-7KE512BW)
Sentiment score: 13
Reddit mentions: 28
We found 28 Reddit mentions of Samsung 850 PRO - 512GB - 2.5-Inch SATA III Internal SSD (MZ-7KE512BW). Here are the top ones.
Buying options
View on Amazon.comor
The World's First Consumer SSD Powered by Samsung V-NAND Technology, Ideal for Hardcore PC Gamers, Heavy PC Users, Business ProfessionalUltimate Sequential Read/Write Performance : Up to 550MB/s and 520MB/s Respectively, and Random Read/Write IOPS Performance : Up to 100K and 90K RespectivelyPerformance, Reliability, Energy Efficiency, and Industry-Leading 10-year Limited WarrantyIncluded Contents: 2.5” (7mm) SATA III (6GB/s) SSD & User Manual (All Other Cables, Screws, Brackets Not Included).Free download of Samsung Data Migration and Magician software available for easy installation and SSD managementWindows 10/8/7/Vista SP1 and above (32/64 bit), Widows Server 2008 (32/64 bit), Linux Compatible.
Specs:
Color | Black |
Height | 0.27 Inches |
Length | 3.94 Inches |
Number of items | 1 |
Release date | July 2014 |
Size | 512 GB |
Weight | 0.14 Pounds |
Width | 2.76 Inches |
CPU | Intel Xeon E5-2630 v3 Haswell-EP 2.4 GHz | $704.02@ Newegg
SSD | Samsung 850 PRO - 512GB | $218.61@ Amazon
CPU Cooler | Cooler Master Hyper 212 EVO 82.9 CFM Sleeve Bearing CPU Cooler | $29.99@ Newegg
Motherboard | ASUS Z10PA-D8(ASMB8-IKVM) Dual LGA2011-v3/ | $395.44@ Amazon
Memory | Kingston 64GB (4 x 16GB) Registered DDR4-2133 Memory | $450.99@ Newegg
Power Supply | Corsair HXi Series, HX1000i, 1000 Watt | $195.98@ Amazon
Host Bus Adapter | LSI LSI00244 (9201-16i) PCI-Express 2.0 x8 SATA / SAS Host Bus Adapter Card, Single Pack--Avago Technologies | $329.99@ Newegg
|| Total
| (Prices include shipping and discounts when available.) | $2325.02"
Another 3k in HDDS spread out over time.
So if you're getting in mainly for Destiny you will be disappointed. SSDs give a marginal improvement because remember you have to wait for everyone to be loaded into an activity before you load in. Second everything is stored server side so that delay in opening your inventory isn't caused by your slow Hard Drive but the Destiny servers themselves, there is a 2 second improvement but at least to me it doesn't make a difference. (I have 2,000 hours on an SSD with Destiny and I saw no improvement to speak of)
Now assuming that you still want to get one because you play other games,
For the Enclosure, this little unit is awesome and what I use.
Collective Minds 2.5" Hard Drive Enclosure & 3 Front USB 3.0 Ports Media HUB - Xbox One $39.99 from Amazon
It acts as an enclosure and a 3 port hub for 3 USB 3.0 ports, so it's super useful.
Now for the Drives
Drive | Seller | Price
---|---|----
Intel 730 SERIES| Amazon| $250 480GB
Samsung 850 PRO | Amazon | $220 512GB
Samsung 850 EVO| Amazon| $165 500GB
These are the 3 I would stay with in order from top to bottom in terms of performance and quality.
Hope this helps.
Just take a look at the other numbers aside from the main menu time and you'll see they aren't that much faster.
it's either seagate or WD. Whoever wrote the post on slickdeals is borrowing phrases from the product names.
Look at the 512GB SSD.. "2.5 inch SATA III Internal SSD"
Now look here:
https://www.amazon.com/Samsung-850-PRO-2-5-Inch-MZ-7KE512BW/dp/B00LF10KTO
Now that the [C-Box is shipping] (https://cboxsystem.ecwid.com/#!/READY-TO-SHIP-C-Box-System-with-Up-to-1TB-SSD-Support-Ships-within-1-week/p/52826064/category=0) and storage cost is less of an issue, I'm definitely leaning toward the URSA Mini 4K and RAW.
With the C-Box, you can be ready to shoot with 512GB of storage for $4599 (PL mount).
Here's what I'm looking at [Referral Links]
I am concerned about low light as well, but people seem to be getting good results in low light with fast lenses: https://vimeo.com/149554465
I agree with you on the FS5 look - not a big fan. I do like FS7 CineEI, but I can't afford $7999 for a camera body.
Best of luck with your feature!
It's this one.
I managed to borrow a keyboard off a friend, which worked fine so fortunately I'm all up and running now.
Thanks for the help :)
My first SSD failed within the first few months.
I was hooked though, and could never go back to HDDs.
Anyone reading this who still has an ordinary disk drive, get an SSD drive now - you don't know what you're missing.
SSDs:
HDDs:
I have a Samsung 850 Pro and it has sped things up quite a bit. Absolutetly worth the money. Also did a completely clean Windows install, would recommend.
Why are you going to pay $482.98 for the 256 GB Vertex 4 when you can get a 512 GB Samsung 850 Pro for $399.99 (including free shipping).
That's perfect. Then this is what I recommend:
Overall this would be about $260 plus shipping, which is a significant savings over the $2000+ you'd pay for a new machine. I think the main things you're encountering with machine sluggishness are 1) a slow laptop hard drive and 2) low RAM capacity, which means your machine relies on swapping between RAM and the disk, which you notice as slowness. The above should help alleviate the issue and put your machine into warp drive.
You don't need anything with dedicated graphics, so I'm not sure why anyone is recommending that route. I think that the best option for you would be the Lenovo ThinkPad T460p.
You can configure it with up to 32GB RAM (which I recommend doing yourself with this so it's less than half the price of what Lenovo wants.
You also get a full TDP processor and can configure it with an Intel i7-6820HQ, which is very powerful (and it forces in the Nvidia 940MX graphics for that gaming that you're "not doing" ;D ). If battery life is a problem, make sure to upgrade to the 72Whr rear battery and since this has hot swappable batteries, you can buy backups and toss another one in whenever it's getting low without shutting off the machine. It uses 2, one in front, one in rear, with the rear being removable, and only then does it start using the front.
ThinkPad keyboards are also by far the best around, so if you're doing a lot of programming, that is the way to go. You can decide what level of storage you want as well as the display. I would recommend choosing the "14.0 WQHD(2560 x 1440) IPS Non-Touch" option in display, if only because it offers a much brighter 300nit display.
Even choosing all of those upgrades and picking up the RAM separately, you'd still be well under budget. If you choose everything I suggested and the 256GB SSD (much cheaper to buy your own still), and used eCoupon "SAV15THINKPAD" on checkout you'd come in ~$1500.
You could use the excess to tack on a bigger warranty if you wanted, and you'd be sure to have the most durable laptop with the best keyboard, and highest specs for your needs without sacrificing anything and still coming in under budget.
hey i actually just upgraded the FACKKK outta my 2011 MBP.. it runs like a fucking genius right now.. i'll tell u what i got and then why i got it..
Memory: 2x 8GB = 16GB
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B006BMBUAA/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o06_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
OWC Data Doubler (so I could remove SuperDrive and replace w/2nd SSD
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00724W0N2/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o06_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
OWC SuperDrive Enclosure (piece of shit, don't buy, didn't work, feels super cheap
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00724YQSY/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o06_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
SSD: These are the best available on the market, literally, the best.. no, I'm not kidding, they're actually the BEST available.. 2x 512GB
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00LF10KTO/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o06_s01?ie=UTF8&psc=1
1st, don't do anything til you've found your model on:
http://www.everymac.com/
once you've found your model, read through everything CAREFULLY.. they will give u full compatibility reports, known issues, specification maximums, etc.
instructional:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FZ9YkkJRN5c
https://fstoppers.com/video/dont-upgrade-your-macbook-pro-until-you-see-2909
http://blog.macsales.com/18244-owc-diys-wont-void-your-macs-warranty
http://blog.macsales.com/18749-scare-tactics-aside-upgrades-do-not-void-your-warranty
I suggest becoming familiar especially w/those last 2 links.. Apple has serviced my MBP a few times since doing my upgrades (non-related logic board problem), and not for a second did they ever try to void my 3-yr extended applecare plan for me doing those upgrades..
Next you will want to BUY:
http://www.cindori.org/software/trimenabler/
if you don't know what TRIM is, read about it on their site.. very important to have/use w/SSD's that are purchased thru 3rd party suppliers (since apple are assholes and don't like to provide support)
those SSD's i listed are the most cutting edge technology available in the SSD market.. I do not suggest RAID'ing them.. i did this 3x already, i am a computer nerd, i know what i am doing, and every time the RAID had practically failed.. see my thread:
http://forums.macrumors.com/showthread.php?t=1826359
also, make sure that your MBP supports SATA-III in both drive bays (assuming you want to install 2 SSD's), otherwise you will not get full speed capacity.
check out these speeds w/those Samsung 850 Pro 512gb's:
http://imgur.com/mbxFOVz
basically, i've found that they don't handle RAID-0 well, and their support as well as apple's will provide you no support on that subject either.. i've essentially doubled those benchmarks on both ends by trying RAID-0 on them, but 3x reformatting and trying again, they will ALWAYS revert to a massively terrible write speed (see my macrumors link above).. best to leave them as they are.. they are still blazing fast off the bat.
Finally, I had to ditch Yosemite and stick w/Mavericks for this reason..
very important, do not skip this article:
http://www.cindori.org/trim-enabler-and-yosemite/
also, i'm just waking up so sorry if this is sloppy haha
Ah OK!
So if I may point out something that you may have missed - the X99 has capability of running PCIe M.2 SSDs, which can be significantly faster than SATA SSD, even in RAID 0.
You can save yourself a lot of hassle by just using a high speed M.2, like http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820147366&nm_mc=KNC-GoogleAdwords-PC&cm_mmc=KNC-GoogleAdwords-PC-_-pla-_-Enterprise+SSDs-_-N82E16820147366&gclid=CNjXnZyUmsQCFQRhKgodkyUAQw&gclsrc=ds
Check the Passmark of the SAMSUNG SM951 compared to the Intel 520's: http://www.harddrivebenchmark.net/high_end_drives.html
For the scratch disk, I'd recommend switching from the two lower end OCZs to a single faster SSD, like the Samsung 850 Pro
This eliminates the RAID hassle & cuts in half the chance of a drive failure (RAID0 doubles your chance of a drive failure, since if one drive dies, the whole container dies). It's also cheaper & will probably still give you the same performance as the 2xOCZs.
For the storage array... if speed is not as big of a concern as redundancy, you might consider an external enclosure. The Synology DS415+ is a great one to look at. They're not cheap (~$600 for the enclosure with no disks), but if you consolidate to a single, faster SSD for your OS & scratch disks; and forego the additional RAID card, you're probably still in the same ballpark. Benefits are ease of setup, access from your entire LAN, and whatever additional services you may be able to take advantage of that Synology provides in that device.
Just thought I'd throw some alternatives your way.
I had a base model 2012 13 inch MBP, now I have upgraded it to a Samsung 850 PRO 512GB SSD and two Crucial 8 GB RAM. I performs nicely without lag or stutter on the latest MacOS Sierra and I’m waiting for that APFS on High Sierra cause it’ll make it faster and more reliable.
Here are the links for the SSD and RAM
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00LF10KTO/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_-fvSzb4Q6XG2M
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B008LTBJK2/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_gJvSzbNE4KCQV
i really like where SSDs are going! they are getting cheaper and a lot more reliable -samsungs 850 pro has 10(!) years of warranty, holy crap, its on a discount! 512GB for 213 bucks!
http://www.amazon.com/Samsung-512GB-2-5-Inch-Internal-MZ-7KE512BW/dp/B00LF10KTO/ref=lp_10432889011_1_1?s=pc&ie=UTF8&qid=1452679488&sr=1-1
soon we'll be able to use SSDs as mass storage = all our storage will ascend to the glorious shockproof heaven of SSD speeds and access times :D
Let's first break down the different consumer-grade interfaces on SSD's today. There is the traditional SATA interface that has existed for many years over three major iterations (SATA 1, 2 and 3). These SSD drives have only dropped in price dramatically over the past year or two.
A newer interface known as NVMe takes SSD speeds to the next level. SATA 3 has a theoretical transfer limit of 600MB/s, while NVMe is enabling SSDs to reach over 2000MB/s. NVMe also costs considerably more than their SATA interface brethrens.
For example, Samsung's 512GB 850 Pro SSD (SATA interface) runs for ~$225 on Amazon.
https://www.amazon.com/Samsung-850-PRO-2-5-Inch-MZ-7KE512BW/dp/B00LF10KTO/
While the Samsung's 512GB 950 Pro SSD (NVMe interface) is priced at ~$336
https://www.amazon.com/Samsung-950-PRO-Internal-MZ-V5P512BW/dp/B01639694M
So can I see SSD prices generally rising 20-25% into 2018? Yes, based on the new NVMe interface. Do I think the old SATA 3 SSD pricing will increase by 20-25% into 2018? Hell no.
This is EVO, not pro. This is 860 Pro: https://www.amazon.in/Samsung-512GB-2-5-inch-Internal-MZ-7KE512BW/dp/B00LF10KTO/ref=sr_1_4?ie=UTF8&qid=1520361395&sr=8-4&keywords=Samsung+860+pro&dpID=413KAHAf7rL&preST=_SY300_QL70_&dpSrc=srch
Here's my suggestion:
Samsung 850 Pro 512GB 2.5-Inch SATA III Internal SSD (MZ-7KE512BW) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00LF10KTO/ref=cm_sw_r_awd_bZwKub08SXTCH
Just bought it for myself and am eagerly awaiting to replace my boot drive.
Thanks for your reply.
Will this one work???
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Samsung-inch-Solid-State-Drive/dp/B00LF10KTO
what else do I need to be able to replace it? will this be the same speed as the default?
thanks
Where do you see a 960 EVO costing less than an 850 Pro? Using Amazon and Newegg as references:
Seems prices raised today; I had the 960 EVO 250GB for $129.99 on newegg and I refreshed and it's now $158.something and I can't even find the $130 page in history. Some Samsung pages on Amazon that I looked at yesterday have raised in price too.
The M.2 interface reduces warranty (3 years 850 EVO vs 5 years SATA, 3 years 960 EVO despite costing as much as 850 Pro with a 10 year warranty, 5 years 960 Pro that costs approximately 120%-150% more than the 850 Pro), has less memory cells (afaik this is supposed to make it a bit harder to hold perf under load and possibly reduce endurance, but I've been told it makes no difference on endurance at one point; so leaving it out there that it may or may not), NVMe runs very hot and needs heatsinks or other heat management techniques, adding also to the cost of it.
The read/write values that matter for about 95% of all operations you would be using on a SSD is 4K QD1-4. 4K QD32 and sequential data legitimately doesn't matter for almost everything. 960 Pro with its like 3000+ sequential read and 2100+ sequential write? That's just benchmark-inflating numbers for the most part when it comes to using the drive. For the most part, you could ignore those. 960 EVO vs 850 Pro? There should be no contest with which to buy.
If you got 500GB EVOs for your games then cool, keep em, good choices. But for your OS I suggest a 256GB 850 Pro at least.
personally i like samsung
i have 2 of these:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00LF10KTO/ref=psdc_1292116011_t1_B00OAJ412U?th=1
Mainly League of Legends/WoW/Overwatch.
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Samsung-inch-Solid-State-Drive/dp/B00LF10KTO/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1543171140&sr=8-1&keywords=Samsung%2B-%2B850%2BEVO-Series%2B500%2BGB%2B2.5%22%2BSolid%2BState%2BDrive&th=1
​
How would I use this? What do I load onto it exactly.
Samsung Evo 500
Damn, the 850 Pro 512Gb is almost $100 more
Oh yeah, batching works fine too, its just cost vs time equafion. I have few dupe needs, so I spent under $300 and I have 3 clones going from time to time myself. Have fun cloning☺
edit:
Here's what I use by the way;it's just fine for my needs
http://www.amazon.com/Seagate-Expansion-Desktop-External-STBV5000100/dp/B00JT0EGPW
http://www.amazon.com/IO-Crest-eSATA-Components-SI-PEX40065/dp/B00AZ9T4F8
http://www.amazon.com/Sabrent-External-Duplicator-Function-EC-HDD2/dp/B00IKC14OG
and lastly the ssd's external / internal
http://www.amazon.com/Sabrent-2-5-Inch-Shockproof-Enclosure-EC-UK3B/dp/B0126RO1YK
http://www.amazon.com/Samsung-512GB-2-5-Inch-Internal-MZ-7KE512BW/dp/B00LF10KTO
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000HJ99DI
Cheers.
I have an Asrock z97 extreme4.
Wanna upgrade to an SSD.
Samsung 850 Pro or M.2 960 EVO?
I know I might not get the full speed out of the 960 because of my MB but its 20€ more than the 850 Pro...
And im not only gonna use it for gaming but also 4k video-editing
At work right now, so I'm not which build. I believe I'm on the anniversary build.
Definitely on SteamVR beta, though.
I should also note that I use an SSD and not an rpm based drive.
http://www.amazon.fr/Samsung-S%C3%A9rie-S-ATA-6-0Gbps-MZ-7KE512BW/dp/B00LF10KTO