The Host Memory Buffer (HMB) feature utilizes the DMA
(Direct Memory Access) of PCI Express to allow SSDs to use some of the DRAM on
PC system, instead of requiring the SSD to bring its own DRAM.
Outstanding performance
GIGABYTE
NVMe SSD provides performance for your daily computing tasks, boast of
best controller & NAND flash that provide.
Sequential
read speeds up to 1700 MB/s.
Sequential
write speeds up to 1100 MB/s.
GIGABYTE
M.2 PCIe SSD gives you faster data transferring experience compared to
2.5" SATA solid state drive.
SSD Tool Box
The newly updated SSD Tool Box is an application that helps
users monitor SSD Status, provides general information such as model name, FW
version, health condition, drive optimization and also detects sensor
temperature. Moreover, users can clear all the data with the Secure Erase
function. You can download the SSD Tool Box from the Support.
Reliability You Can Trust
GIGABYTE NVMe SSDs possess both high data transferring speed
and enhanced endurance, providing durable MTBF* of 1.5 million hours and 5
years or 300TBW
Specifications
Interface
PCI-Express 3.0 x4, NVMe 1.3
Form
Factor
M.2 2280
Total
Capacity
512GB
NAND
NAND Flash
External
DDR Cache
N/A
Sequential
Read speed
Up to 1700 MB/s
Sequential
Write speed
Up to 1100 MB/s
Random
Read IOPS
Up to 180k
Random
Write IOPS
Up to 250k
Dimension
80 x 22 x 2.3 mm
Mean
time between failure (MTBF)
1.5M hours
Power
Consumption (Active)
Avg. read : 2.6W ; Write : 2.4W
Power
Consumption (Idle)
1.9mw
Temperature
(Operating)
0°C to 70°C
Temperature
(Storage)
-40°C to 85°C
Note
* Test system configuration: configuration may vary by
models, we will choose the latest platform for verification.
* Performance may vary based on SSD's firmware version and system hardware
& configuration. Sequential performance measurements based on
CrystalDiskMark v.5.1.2 and I0meter 1.1.0.
* Speeds based on internal testing. Actual performance may vary.
* TBW (Terabyte Written):Terabytes Written" is the total amount of data that
can be written into an SSD before it is likely to fail.
* 1GB = 1 billion bytes. Actual useable capacity may vary.