- Phison X200z Write a complete trip every 24 minutes without stopping
- It offers resistance and performance that breaks records with 60 DWPD capacity
- Tweaktown calls it the most powerful SSD based on flash ever tested
Tweaktown He has delivered his first practical look at the SSD Phison Pascari X200Z 3.2TB Enterprise SSD and, spoiler alert, was impressed.
Built with Flash SLC and running on a PCIE GEN5 X4 interface, the X200Z has a writing resistance rating of 60 unit writings per day (DWPD), which translates into a surprising complete traction deed every 24 minutes.
Like Jon Coulter Tweaktown Said: “The storage SSD in SLC Pascari X200Z 3.2TB of Phison is simultaneously the highest capacity, the lowest latency and the most enduro SSD based on flash of its kind we have found.”
The best ever seen
The X200Z is built for extreme durability in demanding cache storage roles, especially in front of QLC matrices.
Buffla of random writing work loads, remodel them in sequential data and directs them to slower and more fragile qlc layers, improvement of speed, reliability and general useful life of the storage system.
Coulter points out: “The 3.2TB model we have in the hand has a 60 DWPD rating or an amazing 350 Petabytes of resistance. Incredible.”
The unit also shines in performance. In the tests, it exceeded its factory specifications in all areas. Kifutput Secostry Read Tweaktown Laboratory records: while writing performance came at more than 10,200 Mb/s.
In random workloads, the X200Z reached up to 2800k IOP and showed a strong consistency in all the depths of the tail.
Coulter was impressed by the performance curve: “His low tail depth yield here is impressive.”
He adds: “We knew it would be good, but we do not anticipate that the mixed workload performance of the unit would be so fantastic. With much, the best we have seen.”
Phison positions its Pascari line as business degree, offering flexibility in the factors of U.2 and E3.s and support for double port settings. The Pascari X200 series already has design victories in data centers, video platforms and HPC workloads.
Coulter concludes: “The SSD Pascari X200Z 3.2TB of Phison is easily the most powerful SSD based on flash that we have tried.”