Sunday, 21 September 2014 17:48

Kingston SM22080S3 120GB M.2 SATA Drive Review Featured

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Value -
Value is another very subjective topic. What is expensive to some might be a deal to others. You can look at this topic in multiple ways. One is raw price and the other is what you get for the money. Each is accurate and both are correct ways to look at price/value. We tend to look at features, performance and real-property when we discuss value. However, we also take into account the raw cash cost of the item. We found the Kingston 120GB SM22080S3 online for anywhere between $89 and $130 depending on the e-tailer we looked at. This gives it a pretty good price range if you grab it for around $90. You will need a motherboard or system that supports M.2 in SATA which might be a little more difficult. We found that many new motherboards only support PCIe flavors of M.2 drives which is something of a pain. Digging up a motherboard with real support for M.2 SATA might change the actual cost of having one of these drives in your system.

Conclusion -
The M.2 SATA is an interesting product with some very nice features that play into the consumer market. In looking at the performance for non-compressed data we find that these drives should be excellent for multi-media based systems. In other words, just about every consumer computer on the planet could make use of an SSD with DRAM caching. It also allows manufacturers to build smaller systems and maintain the same level of performance that you get from a regular SATA drive. The Kingston SM22080S3 is an excellent example of what can be done with this form factor. Again, you might have to do some looking to find a board that will work with it, but the performance is certainly going to be there when you do. The price is also very good considering this is a newer form factor. We are impressed with the SATA flavor of the M.2 form factor and honestly can’t wait to see what the PCie versions will bring to the table once they are more prevalent. For now, if you have an M.2 SATA port on your new motherboard then you might want to think about picking up a Kingston SM22080S3 drive in either 120GB or 240GB. It would make a great boot or caching drive.

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