Intel's 34nm SSD Preview: Cheaper and Faster?
by Anand Lal Shimpi on July 21, 2009 11:00 AM EST- Posted in
- Storage
The rumors are true, Intel’s 2nd generation SSDs are available starting today.
The high level details are pretty interesting:
- The new drives will be available in 80GB and 160GB sizes and are still called the X25-M and X18-M. The X18-M will start shipping later this quarter.
- 34nm flash (down from 50nm in the original X25-M), allows Intel to include roughly twice the flash in the same size die.
- The enterprise SLC version doesn’t get the 34nm treatment at this point.
- The smaller flash die results in lower prices, the 80GB model will sell for $225 while the 160GB version should sell for $440.
- Best case read/write latency has been improved (more details below).
- The 34nm drives have a new controller and new firmware, also contributing to better performance (2 - 2.5x more 4KB random write IOPS than the old drive!). Enterprise level workstation/database apps should see an immediate performance benefit, client desktop performance is unknown. Don't expect a significant increase in PCMark or SYSMark scores, but in real world usage the new drives could feel faster.
- The new controller is Halogen-free (the old one wasn’t) so Apple could theoretically use the new drives in their systems without being un-green.
- TRIM isn’t yet supported, but the 34nm drives will get a firmware update when Windows 7 launches enabling TRIM. XP and Vista users will get a performance enhancing utility (read: manual TRIM utility). It seems that 50nm users are SOL with regards to TRIM support. Bad form Intel, very bad form.
- I get my drive this week, so expect a review to follow.
Overall it’s an evolution of the X25-M, and not a revolutionary new design. The focus of the evolution is definitely price. Intel wants the X25-M to be used, not only at the high end, but even in mainstream PCs. At $225 for an 80GB drive, the new X25-M is currently cheaper than most Indilinx based drives on the market:
Drive | NAND Capacity | Cost per GB | Price |
Intel X25-M (34nm) | 80GB | $2.81 | $225 |
Intel X25-M (34nm) | 160GB | $2.75 | $440 |
OCZ Vertex (Indilinx) | 64GB | $3.41 | $218 |
OCZ Vertex (Indilinx) | 128GB | $3.00 | $385 |
Patriot Torqx (Indilinx) | 64GB | $3.48 | $223 |
Patriot Torqx (Indilinx) | 128GB | $2.85 | $365 |
OCZ Agility (Indilinx, non-Samsung Flash) | 64GB | $2.77 | $177 |
OCZ Agility (Indilinx, non-Samsung Flash) | 128GB | $2.57 | $329 |
OCZ Summit (Samsung) | 128GB | $3.04 | $389 |
There’s going to have to be a price correction from the competition. We may also see more manufacturers branching out to different flash memory vendors to remain price competitive (similar to what OCZ did with the Agility line).
The Specs Breakdown
The major differences between the 1st and 2nd gen X25-M are highlighted in the table below:
X25-M Gen 1 | X25-M Gen 2 | |
Flash Manufacturing Process | 50nm | 34nm |
Flash Read Latency | 85 µs | 65 µs |
Flash Write Latency | 115 µs | 85 µs |
Random 4KB Reads | Up to 35K IOPS | Up to 35K IOPS |
Random 4KB Writes | Up to 3.3K IOPS | Up to 6.6K IOPS (80GB) Up to 8.6K IOPS (160GB) |
Sequential Read | Up to 250MB/s | Up to 250MB/s |
Sequential Write | Up to 70MB/s | Up to 70MB/s |
Halogen-free | No | Yes |
Price | $345 (80GB) $600 - $700 (160GB) | $225 (80GB) $440 (160GB) |
The move to 34nm gives Intel the ability to both decrease costs and increase capacity. It now costs Intel the same to make a 160GB drive as it used to cost to make an 80GB drive, and about half to make an 80GB drive. Given the current cost structure, I’d say there’s still more room for Intel to drop prices but there’s just no need to given the competitive landscape.
Better Performance
The performance of the new drives is improved. Read and write latency are both improved by around 30%. These figures are for a single sequential operation, so you're looking at best case performance improving on the drive. Intel also tweaked the controller and its firmware to further improve performance; the result is much faster 4KB random writes on the new drives.
The real world benefits are difficult to predict. If you're running an I/O intensive app on the desktop then you'll see a definite improvement from the new drive. More typical desktop/notebook workloads probably won't see a tremendous difference between the 1st and 2nd gen drives. Large file sequential read/write speed remains unchanged and although there have been tweaks to the controller’s algorithms, the overall architecture hasn’t changed either.
I’ll be able to confirm for sure when I get a drive this week.
Other Spec Changes
There are two other specifications that have changed, one for the better and one for the worse with the new drive:
X25-M Gen 1 | X25-M Gen 2 | |
Idle Power (MobileMark 2007) | 65mW | 75mW |
Operational Shock | 1,000G for 0.5 msec | 1,500G for 0.5 msec |
Load power hasn't changed between the drives, they are both at 150mW. Idle power went up by 10mW thanks to the new controller. These are "typical" values while running MobileMark 2007, so I'm not sure if things change at all if you're looking at real world workloads. Intel claims that the new drive doesn't deliver worse battery life than the old one, but I'll have to verify.
The maximum amount of operational shock that the 34nm drive can take went up by 50%; 1500Gs for 0.5 msec sure seems like a lot. I'm not sure if anything changed internally to allow for this higher rating or if it's simply the result of better manufacturing/improving production.
Halogen Free, Apple Friendly
A little known fact about the original X25-M was that its controller wasn’t Halogen-free. Because Intel used Halogens in the first controller, companies that had strict environmental restrictions (e.g. Apple) wouldn’t touch the drives.
Apple couldn't claim BFR-free on its new MacBook Pro if it used Intel's 1st gen X25-M. Bromine is a Halogen.
The new drive has a new controller and it is Halogen free. For Apple to glance over the X25-M in its mobile lineup now would be a serious mistake.
How to Tell the Drives Apart
Despite the price drop and internal changes, Intel is still calling these things the X25-M and X18-M. So how do you tell the new drives apart from the old ones? It all comes down to the part number; if the last two digits are a G1 then it’s the old drive, if they are a G2 it’s the new one. If you have them in hand, the new drives are silver, the old ones are black.
X25-M Gen 1 | X25-M Gen 2 | |
80GB 2.5" | SSDSA2MH080G1 | SSDSA2MH080G2 |
160GB 2.5" | SSDSA2MH160G1 | SSDSA2MH160G2 |
80GB 1.8" | SSDSA1MH080G1 | SSDSA1MH080G2 |
160GB 1.8" | SSDSA1MH160G1 | SSDSA1MH160G2 |
TRIM Support: Not For 50nm Drives
Part of today’s announcement is the fact that Intel will enable TRIM on these 34nm drives when Windows 7 ships. Intel is planning on releasing a user downloadable firmware update that will enable TRIM support. Windows Vista and XP users will get a performance enhancement tool that presumably will just manually invoke the TRIM command. I suspect that Intel is waiting until Windows 7 to enable TRIM support is to make sure that everything is thoroughly tested. As we’ve seen with other attempts to enable TRIM, it’s a tricky thing to do.
The disappointing part of the announcement is that there’s no TRIM support for the first gen 50nm drives. As far as I can tell, this isn’t a technical limitation of the drives, but rather something Intel is choosing to enable only on the 34nm products.
Final Words...for now
I'm still waiting on my 34nm review sample, as soon as I get it I'll start working on a full review. I've already started work on the newest SSDs from the competition, so expect something soon.
73 Comments
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michal1980 - Wednesday, July 22, 2009 - link
hows it screwing you?when car makers add new features to new model years are they screwing the prievous model year buyers?
iwodo - Tuesday, July 21, 2009 - link
I forgot to mention, doesn't 150mw seems very low? Other site has been reporting other SSD using up to 4W when active. Which means it aren't saving much energy compare to 2.5" HDD.May be anand could do a power table comparison when you ever decide to do an SSD roundup.
iwodo - Tuesday, July 21, 2009 - link
If the Vertex gets anywhere between 20 - 30% price cut it will be a very attractive price point for everyone.However at the current rate i fail to see why i would choose anything over Intel 34nm offering.
Anand do you know, what processing technology is being used for Intel Controller chip?
It is rather disappointing that even Intel upcoming chipset wont have SATA 3.0. The current 2.0 is seriously holding back SSD RAW performance.
It looks like 2010 will finally be the year of SSD.
blyndy - Tuesday, July 21, 2009 - link
There have been a lot of new SSD releases and updates in the past six months and even in the past few weeks.It's time for an SSD roundup.
VooDooAddict - Tuesday, July 21, 2009 - link
I was looking at the Intel 80GB over the weekend for an i7 build. This price drop is great news.BenJackson - Tuesday, July 21, 2009 - link
If I understand Trim correctly from your previous article http://www.anandtech.com/storage/showdoc.aspx?i=35...">http://www.anandtech.com/storage/showdoc.aspx?i=35..., it will delete and re-write blocks after every file delete operation to clean the LBA page, whether this will be helpful or not.Considering consumer drives are MLC-based, do you have any figures on how the Trim command may affect the life-span of these drives?
vol7ron - Tuesday, July 21, 2009 - link
Could you please compare to the new Corsair coming out?Most notably the x64 or x128
http://www.engadget.com/2009/07/16/corsair-cranks-...">http://www.engadget.com/2009/07/16/cors...-extreme...
http://hothardware.com/News/Corsair-Launches-New-E...">http://hothardware.com/News/Corsair-Launches-New-E...
I'm not sure if you could get your hands on one, but it'd be nice to see.
Thank you,
vol7ron
Endoplasmic - Tuesday, July 21, 2009 - link
"TRIM Support: Not For 50nm Drives"I was hoping you could point to a link that states this from Intel. My x25-m is fairly new (less than a week) and I'd like to make sure that if I was to return it that it was because TRIM isn't supported on this drive.
The read/write stuff I can live without, but extending the life of the drive is what I'm down with.
Thanks.
snoooze - Tuesday, July 21, 2009 - link
Since SSD lack rotating parts and are pretty much unsensitive to dust I can't really see the reason to continue with an enclosure and the accompanying cable harness that is the case with a 2.5"/SATA-drive. And how long will it take before even SATA 6Gbit is saturated performance wise, 2-3 years?I would really like to see a PCI-express version of this and other new cheap performance oriented SSD.
Would be interesting to here your word on this Anand.
Best regards
snoooze - Tuesday, July 21, 2009 - link
hear*