what a joy to hear a PERSON explain these things instead of a computer voice bombarding us with useless abbreviations without any explanation whatsoever. Great job, thanks.
I think this "42GB cache" deserves some explaination: Both drives may truly have 42GB cache, but while writing such large sequential files, drives use their much higher IOPS capability to write to TLC/QLC and the SLC cache at the same time... We know QVO's QLC (as seen around 12:26 mark) is barely capable of ~75MB/s without using cache so here is the math: From the start of the video up until it slows down at 1.35 QVO drive had written 75 - 29= ~46GBs... Of which, drive write at its known ~75MB/s speed to as QLC (from the start) for first 95 seconds, approximately storing 4,4GBs worth of data.. Remaning data is 46 - 4,4 = 41,6GBs which couldn't be written to slow QLC, so it has to be written to 42GB SLC cache, filling it and then slowing down transfer to only what QLC is capable of... Since evo does exactly the same and writes to TLC and SLC at the same time, but TLC itself is much faster than QLC (roughly around 200-250MB/s), your 75GB test file probably wasn't enough to fill up its 42GB SLC cache... This is the exact behaviour I've observed from my tests with my own intel 660p... It doesn't "simply" fill up its 76GB cache (when 50% full) and then slow down... If I hammer it with burst 1.5GB/s writes it does just that (technically it probably doesn't but it doesn't make a noticable difference)... But when writing from a slower source at ~340MB/s, drive doesn't slow down even at 120GB file transfers... This dynamic cache behaviour matters a lot more than it would seem in real life use cases.. When transferring large a game for example, it has both large files and small ones.. My reading source is two SATA SSDs in RAID-0 configuration... If the source sends burst of sequential files @1GB/s, 660p caches them.. When source slows down ~60 MB/s to read hundeds of
Great post! You saved me from writing about the same thing. One differing point of view... I wouldn't call older SSDs garbage. They move to their proper position down the food chain. For example, I'm now using inexpensive low end SSDs with Raspberry Pi computers.
Great post. I may add that HLC (hexa level cells) drives are in active development, and PLC (penta level cell) drives are already being produced by Tobisha as an example. This trend will probably continue until OLC (octa level cell) drives at least since all it basically requires is higher grade of material purity in the charge trap layer, and refinement of the ADC read decoder. Writing is done by PWM (pulse width modulation) so that in principle has no upper bounds that are relevant for this purpose. What we will see in the future is even more intelligent controllers that can distinguish between different levels of cell damage because a future octa level cell may get damaged but may still function just fine as a QLC or SLC cell. At the same time controllers will do active data tier levels where data is only moved to persistent higher level cells once it's determined that the data is indeed persistent data.
@@SaturnusDK Speaking of intelligent controllers... In the future, instead of controllers doing all the guesswork, I only wish there would be a lot more user interactivity while setting up the SSDs (in addition to some "auto" mode for less tech-sawwy people, of course).. Users should be able to select his/her movie archive folder an set it to write in QLC always (or whatever highest level device support), and set their, say, temporary render output folder to stay SLC all the time.. Windows already reports actual size and "size on disk" as seperate criteria so it wouldn't be too hard for non tech-sawwy users to understand.. Write MLC instead of QLC and "size on disk" will report twice the actual size. Also, "cache" size should be user adjustable. I have 450GB+ empty space on my 1TB drive, intel says I can only have ~70GB of cache.. Why? I don't care about longevity of cells and I would want to set this entire area as cache. Technically, SLC cache can encompass the entire empty space as data will be read to DRAM and then written as QLC anyway. With very little software tweaks for taking user input (which will be definately easier than developing "smarter" controllers) the difference between a pro drive and a entry level drive would disappear (apart from actual cell/controller quality)... You don't buy xTB drive. You buy X amount of cells. You are free choose to configure it all as 256GB SLC disk, 1TB QLC or 2TB OLC disk... Or somewhere in between, adjust write levels on folder-by-folder basis. Have both high capacity folders, and high speed folders at the same time on the same SSD. If you need more capacity, you sacrifice write speed or viceversa, you just select a folder right-click into some menu and adjust the slider.. This is my dream SSD at least...
I agree, he is a brilliant man and teacher as well. I love the way he illustrates his subject matter in his videos. Helps the persons who are not so 'tech-savy' to grasp what he is trying to explain.
No, defo not happening. They then would not be able to sell tlc drives so easily next to mlc to less knowledgeable person. Mlc means also tlc and qlc realy since multi word in mlc is very wide meaning word lol.
Samsung marketing is already more descriptive than other brands. They've dropped TLC nomenclature completely. Instead they say 2-bit MLC and 3-bit MLC. See newegg, for example. For some reason, though, they still use the Q in the QVO. I'm guessing it's because the drives aren't entirely 4-bit (16-level) per cell in operation, as it will manage them based on usage and available capacity.
@@catsspat right.... 2bit mlc and 3 bit mlc and 4 bit mlc, all are mlc so that the more numbers, the more people buy thing like always lol. tho 2 bit mlc is real mlc, other are tlc and qlc. but marketing team abused word "multi" in mlc word compination and adapted it to tlc and qlc since tlc and qlc do have multi level cells. just plain word play.
you wish all of your teachers would fly over all subjects, telling things, but not practicing anything... well You just didn't undestand the difference between a youtuber and a teacher.
Did you try listening instead of daydreaming and tossing it off? Lol stupid question I know, you were probably tossing it off. Then few years later try to pin the blame on someone else... Like we all invariably do 😇
I agree. I learn the most from this channel myself everytime clearly understanding the "works" behind the hardware knowing what makes the difference in future "better" revisions to consider finding best for the price i want to spend be happy with get most perfomance pout the part for price - thanks to this channel once again
I came originally planning to skip to the last 5 mins to see which was better, but got my attention and ended up watching the whole thing, actually made it super interesting!
Awesome video... In 17 minutes, all you every wanted to know about SSDs and the difference between EVO and QVO... hundredths of pages and several sellers never actually made it that clear for me. Thanks. Subscribed !
@Cellphone Dave That explains that little guy with the pointed hat that appears on my screen. Got 'WIZZARD' spelled across his hat, calls himself Rincewind...
Again - one of the clearest and yet detailed explanation of "tricky" SSD technology - Not all companies are transparent on their SSD designs either - Thanks for clearing this up!
Excellent, very descriptive, very well documented and presented comparison and explanation of TLC and QLC technology of SSD drives. Thank you so much for that. Once again, your video is worth more than reading quite a number of different benchmarks. It is so rare to come across such top-notch information presented in impeccable English. I am 63 years old, I have used computers and done extensive programming since 1979 and, yes, I wish I had teachers like you when I was still a student. Thank you so much!
I just installed two 500 GB 860 EVO's. I needed to replace an aging WD 500 GB Blue HHD that is around eight years old. After installation and migrating my PC's windows OS and various other programs, from the HHD to the SSD, I have to say I am very impressed by the performance. From boot up to running DOOM 2016, on ultra settings 1440P 60FPS, it is a huge game changer. Although, I was a bit skeptical at first, my brother had already made the leap a few months before. I am glad he helped in changing my mind. Cheers to you K.
I bit the bullet and bought a 1TB samsung QVO about 6 months ago and I am over the moon with reliability and speed on my old G62 HP. like you I will never have trusted a SSD over a year ago due to bad experiences with them a few years back..they all failed within a month ! All I will say I am a convert and if you aint got one then you are missing out on that extra oomph ! And I will add that Samsung must be congratulated on finally converting a serious SSD doubter like me , so well done !
Manufacturers should really make the effort of advertising clearly the differences between both technologies. If you look at these boxes, there is simply no clear mention of the current technology. This is clearly a way for misleading some consumers. Thanks as always for the fantastic video.
I had not thought of this -- you make a very good point indeed. Both the EVO and QVO Samsung SSDs are great drives, but they could be clearer pointing out the differences.
@@ExplainingComputers , I'm constantly explaining to people why QLC drives aren't horrible. There's massive confusion related to the performance drop that only happens after a large, sustained write. But people keep saying "don't buy QLC because the performance just drops off a cliff if you do much" when in reality very, very few people will every write that much data at once. The LOWER PRICE makes a QLC SSD more than ideal for most people... if you're some god-like being who explains computers you may have different needs but for us mere mortals QLC is fine.
@@photonboy999 I totally agree. I think we will see QLC drives become more and more popular with many users. As I said at the end of the video, we did not trust TLC not that many years ago.
It raises a point about marketing and how specs are very much manipulated. There is some what a comparison here to saying it's like buying a car that can do 100mph, but after 5 miles it's limited to 50mph. A bit of a grey area really. For normal daily use I can see that this would be fair enough (at least for the drives, not the car). But if this is not clear it could cause problems in certain usage scenarios.
@@photonboy999 Sadly you are mistaken, QLC Drives are good, the downside is the time it takes that drive to become worn out compared to a TLC or even an MLC drive. QLC Drives wear out faster writing the same amount of Data that a TLC writes, while they are a great cost to performance solution the issue comes down to long term redundancy and it is there that QLC lose their luster. So you wouldn't want to use one say for your system drive, but a steam drive would be applicable or movies and music, basically anything that doesn't constantly have writes, erasures and more writes.
YESSSS! I made the right decision! Thx for this video, I just bought 2 of these 1TB, and I was wondering if QVO or EVO would be the better choice. I went for EVO and now see I did the right thing because I too have large video files to shovel around. And the result of the comparison made my day. Thx Chris, good video as always.
I watched this video a few months ago, and now I'm really in the market for the 2TB Samsung QVO 860, and I came back here, and I was just so amazingly impressed that you packed so much information in here, and it was exactly what I was looking for! I'm glad that I'm subscribed and that I saw this video before, and now after watching it a second time, I think I'm ready to get the 2TB version. You even noted that Samsung claims that the TurboWrite buffer size for the 2/4 TB versions are 78 GB. I don't think I could get this wealth of information so concisely from anywhere else. Thanks a lot!
@@ExplainingComputers Thanks for the reply! I bought it two days ago, on the same day that I made the comment above, and it is working very well so far!
I know very little of computer hardware but try to stay informed when looking to upgrade my PC. This video was very simple and easy to understand. Thank you!
Thank you for perfecto explanation!! I been wondering if I done mistake to buying QVO 1 TB instead of EVO.. This video helped me so much!! My worries are gone. Thank you
Another excellent video Chris , I was a skeptic and very scared of life expectancy and now love my Samsung EVO 860 ! Thanks for this fine video and your excellent and unique style it’s simply the best !
This is the best explained video of QLC drives I've found. I've tried to explain to people the differences but they often just don't understand. I will be sharing this video for sure.
As someone who watches many videos in the tech side of TH-cam; I have to say this is probably one of the best I've ever watched. Not only is the theory there but also most aspects of practical information I could ever wish to find in a single video. Amongst other useful information there are comparisons between two current market leading SSDs, which is of high value to those buying SSDs right now, and also including current market price to give the viewer a better idea of price to performance, which is a significant concern for the average buyer.
I like all the single board computer demonstrations on this channel, very interesting stuff. However, I found this channel doing research on SSD's. So I love the videos, like this one, that go over all the technologies involved along with tests. Excellent video 👍
This is vital information for me and I appreciate that you do the research and share it all so clearly and concisely. Explaining Computers is my most favorite TH-cam channel bar none. Please keep up the great work. And Thank You! :-)
As you know from my previous posts, I have flash memory data expertise in building and designing hardware dating back to 2008 and even further if you consider spinning drives as well as being a contributor for m.2 and other newer open source standards. So I pay particularly close attention to these subjects more than others. That being said, I felt like your presentation was excellent! I have started using your clips occasionally in presentations. So hopefully you get even more followers as a result.
His video proves that solid state drives R just a ridiculous $cam = even slower than regular hard drives, + unreliable = pointless =)) Reminds me of guys chopping off their weenies pretending it turns them into girls HAHA
You're not seeing the 42 GB SLC cache on the TLC drive, because it takes more than a 75 GiB transfer to see it. The TLC cells can take writing faster than the QLC cells, so your data is moving through that SLC cache faster.
I was thinking that we wouldn't see the drop at the 42GB point for that reason (for either SSD), but I didn't consider that the difference in TLC and QLC write speeds would be emptying the cache at such significantly different rates. I wonder if this also explains why the QVO also had faster write speeds during the cache phase: The EVO cache was spending more time sending data on permanent storage, and therefore had less time to receive the incoming data compared to the QVO's cache?
@@nekomatafuyu The QVO probably just has faster cache. It's newer technology. It really sucks that SLC drives are nowhere to be found. I bet they could fit a pretty good amount in a 3.5" form factor.
I have been using that 1 TB QVO since May in my laptop and for sure there is no cache like 42 GB not even 4 GB ready all the time. I copy music albums quite often their size hardly hitting 1 GB and the write speeds quickly drop to that shown on this video test (roughly 60 to 80 MB/s) and just in a few seconds. I now sort of regret I did not get Crucial MX500 instead since that was the SSD I was after initially.
@@tommik1283 the buffer may be filled with more than just that file you're trying to copy. Basically the cache is hiding the slow write speed. My guess is that the cache was still busy with previous write operations. Let's say you're copying 1GB at a time. By the time you're copying your 42nd GB your operations will slow down because the previous are still being written to the drive. When it is a boot drive, it might be that by the time you're copying your filea, the buffer is already filled with loads of operations from other programs, like temp files and virtual memory.
I am still working with a EVO 840 250Gb for 4 years now and i still have no complains about the drive. I am at 1/2 way of its lifetime now. I used 60Tb while its lifetime expects to have in between 120 to 150Tb writing. But my next drive soon will be an EVO 860 1 Tb drive for certain.
Wow! I love this guy! Not only is he great at what he does, but he's a great character too! Very engaging! The videos have excellent production values! Always well worth a watch! Well done! 👍
Explaining Computers : Thank you Chris for teachings us the difference between TLC & QLC - SSD’s......Once again your timing is impeccable with today’s lesson , for my upcoming hard drive upgrade on my laptop 💻 from HDD >>> SSD !!! Thanks Scarboro 🇨🇦🍀😎💚
Oh Lord! Thanks for such a valuable information a always you do Prof. Barnett. And by the way we are talking about endurance and speeds and so on, I wanted to ask you about something I was told by the technician of my enterprise-environment machines recently upgraded with fancy Toshiba and Samsung SSDs (MLC) regards to how in certain way "to help to extend out" the life expectancy and reduce the erase cycles {which I understand are the ones taking "ssd life away"} He suggested to create a Virtual drive in a high quality SD card (preferable over microSDs) or a "linked Folder (I do not even know what that is)" and since the VHD will be taken as an internal device this way Win10 software like OneDrive for instance could be moved off to that location OR the default download folders which we very often as it is intended of course we download and then delete most of the files we put in our PCs. additionally in these VHD contained in the microsd/sd/USBs can serve as "cold storage" or something alike. and in this way we are not hurting the SSDs blocks by deleting a couple of pictures we do not want or that piece of software we downloaded and then we regretted doing it. the whole idea is that save write/erase cycles. ---- SO WOULD YOU MAKE IN THE NEAR FUTURE A VIDEO EXPLAINING TO US HOW TO MAKE IT PROPERLY --- (My assistant's MS-Surface shall appreciate INDEED!). I am polyglot and I swear I cannot even find a moderately well spoken or educated person explaining this topic. I understand that since this once is done there are additional considerations to be done in Registry editor such as booting scripts to mount automatically the drive (the virtual one from the SD card) well thank you very much again for your formidable and HIGHLY VALUABLE INFORMATION IN YOUR CHANNEL. (BY THE WAY WATCH OUT I HEARD YOU SAYING "GONNA, WANNA" THAT IS UNFORGIVABLE FOR AN ACADEMIC PERSON LIKE YOU ;-D)
Awesome video once again. I would have liked to see you adding another 75Gb and see if the TLC would have dropped down at 78Gb or if it would just have kept on going strong and see how big the cache really is, since it wasn't 42Gb. Thanks again...
I am a memory expert and I can say you only touched the surface of NAND storage cell technology. I think the biggest thing you missed was that not all substrate dies are equal at a given level; there are SLC that are rated up to 100K writes, but others at 50K or even 10K. One indication is to look at the ECC requirement and see how many bits are expected to be corrected per 512 byte page slice. Therefore, there are MLC chips that are superior to lower quality SLC chips. Further, it should be noted that all NAND cells suffer from unreliability and MUST have a hardware ECC layer implemented, unlike NOR cells which can be rated reliable and require no error correction.
I totally agree with what you say -- I gave a very brief overview of the technology, as I did not want that part to dominate the rest of the video. My challenge in making videos is always deciding what to leave out. :)
Thanks, this was a very well made and thought out video with a very interesting topic that has caught my interest. Thank you so much for all your hard work and the effort that you put into these videos that have both an educational value and entertainment one for the mind.
12:34 "Slightly bewildered by..." I am not. I have the 840 Evo. This drive was known to have an issue. It was sold as a software issue. But it was never resolved. It was described by reviewers as a "crazy drop in performance", eventually after the problem manifested itself. Essentially, the "fix" was to buy an 850. I will never buy a Samsung SSD again based on Samsung's reputation alone. So videos like Chris's is valuable to me. We run backups that exceed the sizes in Chris's video, so....no QVO's for us for the time being.
Very well done explanation and test. About the only thing I could have hoped for more was seeing you test how full the fast write on the EVO could go and what it would throttle down to for comparison. Regardless, thanks a lot. I'm adding this video to a personal reference playlist. Cheers. 👍
Chris I sent this video to a close friend of mine who is looking into buying a 1TB QVO from Samsung and he really appreciated that you compared the EVO and QVO as he is still choosing between the two. He got interested in the QVO due seeing it go for around 50 USD for the 1TB version. If he do ends up getting one it will be for storage and games for sure.
For normal use? Actually, no. Unless you move big files around on a very regular basis you are unlikely to notice the caching, and unless you are doing a lot of read-write cycles (e.g. by moving big files around) you are unlikely to hit the limit. These drives have controllers that spread out the wear over the drive, so the lifetime of a drive is much longer than the quoted warranty. Which makes sense, as Samsung probably doesn't like having to pay for the warranty more than they need to. If you want more info and a more nuanced view you can also watch the Linus Tech Tips review of the Intel 660p ("How SSD Technology Keeps Getting WORSE! - Intel 660p Review "). The conclusion there: sure, you have less duty cycles before failure, but you're not going to get there with normal use, and you shouldn't rely on a single drive for critical data anyway (which is also true of a hard drive).
@@mclaine33 You're welcome. And tbh, I prefer TLC as well (or even better: SLC or MLC), but my wallet threatened to give me no food for a year, so I settled for QLC ;)
This is the most informative video which clears the doubts about SSD, most of the people think thar all SSDs are same but that is not the case, thank you Chris.
Why not? Okay, I'm using EVO, but I can recommend QVO to someone who want to save some money and use it for typical customer needs. I actually seen some TLC SSDs that worse than QVO in most of aspects.
@@A64632 For the current pricing, it makes more sense to spend a little extra and get a piece of hardware thats going to be a faster over time and last longer.
@@joem3115 At my opinion the theoretical lifetime for 860 EVO's memory chips is around 200 years in common home/office/game use, but for 860 QVO - something like 50 years. I guess practically it will die much faster cause of corrosion, or something like this. So... not too much difference in expected lifetime. Speed - they have almost the same read speed, and almost the same write speed for the first 42Gb. The only home\office\game scenario when you will be limited with write speed is installing modern game. So.. if you are doing it quite often - than writing speed after first 42Gb matters. Otherwise not. Btw, it's may be probably better for you to look for Samsung 970 EVO Plus to get better speeds. So.. I prefer 860 EVO, but I can recommend 860 QVO for someone who have to save some money. It's also quite good thing I think. At my personal opinion 860 QVO better than many other SSD's based on TLC memory (WD Blue for example), even a little cheaper some of them.
@@A64632 don't get me wrong, they're both good drives but for around $20 more it just seems like a no brainer but for the people still trying to build the rest of their PC, then perhaps the QVO will be fine. As for the 970 EVO Plus goes I actually have that as a boot drive and it's speeds are incredible.
If anyone is curious, CrystalDiskMark is basically a useful GUI wrapper for the Microsoft DiskSpd command line application which is available on github.
Samuel Schwager My assumption is that the turbo cache is acting as a FIFO and the TLC drive never fully filled the FIFO since it could offload the data faster than the QLC drive. The two drives probably have the same amount of cache. I’m guessing if you transferred more data you would eventually hit a point where you fill the FIFO and reveal the true write speed of the TLC.
RAM disk isn't going to speed up the SATA interface. NVME is already tons faster than SATA 3, so it's just the EVO's actual performance. Could just be that is the write speed for the TLC even without the SLC buffer.
The Evo SLC cache is likely not specced wrong, but you forgot to take into account that the cache also continuously gets flushed to the bulk zone while the transfer is happening. Since that bulk storage is faster you'll need more data transferred before it can't keep up. You'd probably have seen a dip if your data set was larger.
Either way all it proves is that hard drives are infinitely superior. If U really need 'fast random access', just get more RAM =P U can also locate cache files & things into RAM with other programs, like web browsers 2 a 'RAM disc' folter, etc.
Thanks for the great explanation Chris. I was between the TLC and the QLC drives, and thanks to you I made up my mind, considering the workload I'm going to put the drive through. Kind regards, keep up the good work.
Amazing to see the ultra-fast evolution of SSDs, when you consider that it was almost a luxury item a few years ago! Their current price-quality ratio makes them almost a must for any basic computer use now. Thank you for this presentation of the technological advances of these mass storage devices!
QLC is cheaper. it's like how people are complaining that super car companies are pushing small engines with turbos instead of the big v8's of the past. it's all about maintaining similar performance for less price. Yes, small engines with turbos (QLC) may not be as reliable as the big old engines (TLC), but it won't matter since even newer technology will be available by the time the current tech (QLC) dies.
That's because V-NAND have boosted the reliability and speed of flash memory. So you can have TLC V-NAND that is faster and more reliable than older MLC NAND. I'd trust TLC V-NAND for my system drive and be okay with QLC for my media storage drive.
Hey PoPe, what do you make of MiCRoN's 5100/5200 MaX series? They are supposed to be better than their PRo & eCo counterparts, but are they the same as a PRO version from SaMSuNG??
With the drop in price of QLC I finally ditched spinning HDDs in my main system. I keep 2x2TB drives in a NAS for movies but my main PC now has 2x1TB Kingston A400 drives for game storage and a 512GB M.2 drive for windows and programs. I think we'll see this become the norm in desktop computing in the next 3-5 years, the only reason I have the NAS is becasue of the reduced life-cycle of QLC.
@@gabcenz I use an NVMe Intel 660p drive, 512GB. Read/Writes at about 1.7gbps (about 2-3x as fast as a sata drive) and it was only $60 for the 512GB. My case is the Fractal Design Focus G and I have 6 fans in it so I've never had problems with temps (FX 8350+ GTX 1660ti for reference)
@@DaxtonAnderson Thanks. Looks like a good option to consider. I'm looking for a new SSD to boot Windows and installing programs. I was a bit worried because I've heard that some m.2 (NVMe or Sata, not sure) may overheat and in some cases cause thermal throttling. Well personally I have a good case and good ventilation too, so I hope I should be ok with any m.2 drive.
Many thanks for this lucid explanation. I now feel better informed, although I'm still a bit nervous about those two Kingson SSDs hanging off the side of my computer. I've never got round to closing up the case, as there's something makes me think it's going to go wrong at any moment -- but so far, so good. I must do a speed check, as I suspect they are rather slow. But they sure are quiet!!!
In my experience, QLC isn't good for a system drive, but fantastic for the storage\game driver, as a secondary one. My system Crucial 1TB ssd got 5% wear after a year, my 4TB Samsung QVO got just 1%, even though I constantly download new TV shows, movies and on it, save lots of files AND it's most often 3\4 occupied, while also having the pagefile on it. While the system 1TB only stopped to wear out rapidly(I was losing like 1% each 2-3 months) when I freed like half of it. Simply because, a system drive writes data automatically all the time, hence I AT LEAST would recommend TLC memory for a system ssd, MLC ideally if you can afford it.
Or U could use a SPINNING REGULAR HARD DRIVE since they have FASTER transfer rate than SSD (according 2 this test!) & INFINITE re-write cycles = fux sake =)) U talk like a junkie trying 2 decide which poison 2 take. Break the brainwash chains, dood =)
Presumably at the 42gb gigabyte point the TLC drive had (in the background) offloaded much more from the SLC cache to the main drive than the QLC drive had managed to at the same point, and it was able to do so because TLC is faster than QLC. In fact it seems like the SLC cache in the TLC drive was never actually at capacity, where as the SLC cache in the QLC drive hit capacity after about 45gb copied.
You make a great point I didn't think of. Still, I think TLC would still run in capacity limits eventually, it just is able to delay that limit way further than QLC. Otherwise having a SLC cache on a TLC drive wouldn't make sense. Naturally we would need a greater volume of data to write to the TLC to show the same effect as the QLC.
You didn't give an explanation for the difference in write speed after the 42 GB cache was filled. The difference is due to the different inherent write speeds of the TLC and QLC cells. If I remember correctl(from nvme drive reviews, maybe the tech deals channel), the TLC sequential write speed is limited to something like 1500 MB/S, so you're still bottlenecked by the SATA interface. I bet they only put in SLC cache for sustainability or scaling (in the production process) reasons. My hypothesis is that you saw a little dip in writing speed after the SLC cache was filled because the internal controller needed to switch to writing directly to the TLC cells. The inherent write speed of QLC is a lot lower as you clearly demonstrated! Great video anyway! Really like your channel!
I have both drives in a build, but neither is used for booting Windows. The QVO is used for temporary work, while the EVO is mainly storage. I have 512GB Samsung 970 PRO NVMe, which is the boot drive and another 1TB which is used for video encoding. I don't think it was mistake buying these drives, and your wonderful video confirms that.
Thank you very much Christopher for share your videos with us. Your videos are exelent and have value information. I just imagine how much time you take to make them. Big hug
what a joy to hear a PERSON explain these things instead of a computer voice bombarding us with useless abbreviations without any explanation whatsoever. Great job, thanks.
I think this "42GB cache" deserves some explaination: Both drives may truly have 42GB cache, but while writing such large sequential files, drives use their much higher IOPS capability to write to TLC/QLC and the SLC cache at the same time... We know QVO's QLC (as seen around 12:26 mark) is barely capable of ~75MB/s without using cache so here is the math:
From the start of the video up until it slows down at 1.35 QVO drive had written 75 - 29= ~46GBs... Of which, drive write at its known ~75MB/s speed to as QLC (from the start) for first 95 seconds, approximately storing 4,4GBs worth of data.. Remaning data is 46 - 4,4 = 41,6GBs which couldn't be written to slow QLC, so it has to be written to 42GB SLC cache, filling it and then slowing down transfer to only what QLC is capable of... Since evo does exactly the same and writes to TLC and SLC at the same time, but TLC itself is much faster than QLC (roughly around 200-250MB/s), your 75GB test file probably wasn't enough to fill up its 42GB SLC cache...
This is the exact behaviour I've observed from my tests with my own intel 660p... It doesn't "simply" fill up its 76GB cache (when 50% full) and then slow down... If I hammer it with burst 1.5GB/s writes it does just that (technically it probably doesn't but it doesn't make a noticable difference)... But when writing from a slower source at ~340MB/s, drive doesn't slow down even at 120GB file transfers...
This dynamic cache behaviour matters a lot more than it would seem in real life use cases.. When transferring large a game for example, it has both large files and small ones.. My reading source is two SATA SSDs in RAID-0 configuration... If the source sends burst of sequential files @1GB/s, 660p caches them.. When source slows down ~60 MB/s to read hundeds of
Great post.
Great post! You saved me from writing about the same thing. One differing point of view... I wouldn't call older SSDs garbage. They move to their proper position down the food chain. For example, I'm now using inexpensive low end SSDs with Raspberry Pi computers.
Great post. I may add that HLC (hexa level cells) drives are in active development, and PLC (penta level cell) drives are already being produced by Tobisha as an example. This trend will probably continue until OLC (octa level cell) drives at least since all it basically requires is higher grade of material purity in the charge trap layer, and refinement of the ADC read decoder. Writing is done by PWM (pulse width modulation) so that in principle has no upper bounds that are relevant for this purpose.
What we will see in the future is even more intelligent controllers that can distinguish between different levels of cell damage because a future octa level cell may get damaged but may still function just fine as a QLC or SLC cell. At the same time controllers will do active data tier levels where data is only moved to persistent higher level cells once it's determined that the data is indeed persistent data.
@@SaturnusDK Speaking of intelligent controllers... In the future, instead of controllers doing all the guesswork, I only wish there would be a lot more user interactivity while setting up the SSDs (in addition to some "auto" mode for less tech-sawwy people, of course).. Users should be able to select his/her movie archive folder an set it to write in QLC always (or whatever highest level device support), and set their, say, temporary render output folder to stay SLC all the time.. Windows already reports actual size and "size on disk" as seperate criteria so it wouldn't be too hard for non tech-sawwy users to understand.. Write MLC instead of QLC and "size on disk" will report twice the actual size. Also, "cache" size should be user adjustable. I have 450GB+ empty space on my 1TB drive, intel says I can only have ~70GB of cache.. Why? I don't care about longevity of cells and I would want to set this entire area as cache. Technically, SLC cache can encompass the entire empty space as data will be read to DRAM and then written as QLC anyway.
With very little software tweaks for taking user input (which will be definately easier than developing "smarter" controllers) the difference between a pro drive and a entry level drive would disappear (apart from actual cell/controller quality)... You don't buy xTB drive. You buy X amount of cells. You are free choose to configure it all as 256GB SLC disk, 1TB QLC or 2TB OLC disk... Or somewhere in between, adjust write levels on folder-by-folder basis. Have both high capacity folders, and high speed folders at the same time on the same SSD. If you need more capacity, you sacrifice write speed or viceversa, you just select a folder right-click into some menu and adjust the slider.. This is my dream SSD at least...
What you just described will likely someday be referred to as "overclocking" your SSD.
Custom firmware and give it hell.
You explain everything so clearly. Keep up the great work!
I want the EVO.
EVO's are cool
I know :-) He makes understanding this sooo clear!
I agree, he is a brilliant man and teacher as well. I love the way he illustrates his subject matter in his videos. Helps the persons who are not so 'tech-savy' to grasp what he is trying to explain.
I agree.
I really wish they change MLC to DLC (Dual Level cell ) , but that may result a copyright infringement lawsuit from EA 🤔🤔.
And change _"level"_ to _"bit"_ (as the number of *_levels_* are 2, 4, 8 and 16, respectively).
No, defo not happening. They then would not be able to sell tlc drives so easily next to mlc to less knowledgeable person. Mlc means also tlc and qlc realy since multi word in mlc is very wide meaning word lol.
Samsung marketing is already more descriptive than other brands. They've dropped TLC nomenclature completely. Instead they say 2-bit MLC and 3-bit MLC. See newegg, for example. For some reason, though, they still use the Q in the QVO. I'm guessing it's because the drives aren't entirely 4-bit (16-level) per cell in operation, as it will manage them based on usage and available capacity.
@@catsspat right.... 2bit mlc and 3 bit mlc and 4 bit mlc, all are mlc so that the more numbers, the more people buy thing like always lol. tho 2 bit mlc is real mlc, other are tlc and qlc. but marketing team abused word "multi" in mlc word compination and adapted it to tlc and qlc since tlc and qlc do have multi level cells. just plain word play.
Your average Joe thinks bigger numbers are better so they'll likely buy QLC thinking it is better than TLC or MLC.
i wish all of my teachers were like this guy, i would've actually learned something.
true!
you wish all of your teachers would fly over all subjects, telling things, but not practicing anything... well You just didn't undestand the difference between a youtuber and a teacher.
Did you try listening instead of daydreaming and tossing it off? Lol stupid question I know, you were probably tossing it off. Then few years later try to pin the blame on someone else... Like we all invariably do 😇
I agree. I learn the most from this channel myself everytime clearly understanding the "works" behind the hardware knowing what makes the difference in future "better" revisions to consider finding best for the price i want to spend be happy with get most perfomance pout the part for price - thanks to this channel once again
QLC needs some TLC to feel better.
:)
@@ExplainingComputers
I love how you just know your stuff so well.
Keith Kuhn
Hah! love it! Would never have spotted that pun!
Great pun. More seriously though, both drives have that SLC cache.
@Gea Sih PLC is in works 🤪😈
I came originally planning to skip to the last 5 mins to see which was better, but got my attention and ended up watching the whole thing, actually made it super interesting!
Glad you enjoyed it!
What a lucid explanation. Clearly stated, no waffle - exactly what I was looking for!
Hello Sir Your channel is the best channel on TH-cam. No ad no background music. Only the good subject. I appreciate it. Keep it up.
Thanks. :)
😀
Awesome video... In 17 minutes, all you every wanted to know about SSDs and the difference between EVO and QVO... hundredths of pages and several sellers never actually made it that clear for me. Thanks. Subscribed !
Welcome aboard.
So you're saying SSD's work off of some form of wizardry.
That's reassuring, all those years I was thinking it was witchcraft.
@Cellphone Dave That explains that little guy with the pointed hat that appears on my screen. Got 'WIZZARD' spelled across his hat, calls himself Rincewind...
@@brianm6337 I do wish these Wizard's would pop up a message when their about to die, as all Wizard's know when they are going to die :)
@Cellphone Dave Don't forget all the pixies which do the wizard's bidding by moving the electrons up into the traps and back again.
lol
Again - one of the clearest and yet detailed explanation of "tricky" SSD technology - Not all companies are transparent on their SSD designs either - Thanks for clearing this up!
Thanks for the many videos you make and all the information you pass on .
Excellent, very descriptive, very well documented and presented comparison and explanation of TLC and QLC technology of SSD drives.
Thank you so much for that. Once again, your video is worth more than reading quite a number of different benchmarks.
It is so rare to come across such top-notch information presented in impeccable English.
I am 63 years old, I have used computers and done extensive programming since 1979 and, yes, I wish I had teachers like you when I was still a student. Thank you so much!
Thanks for your kind feedback, most appreciated.
I just installed two 500 GB 860 EVO's. I needed to replace an aging WD 500 GB Blue HHD that is around eight years old. After installation and migrating my PC's windows OS and various other programs, from the HHD to the SSD, I have to say I am very impressed by the performance. From boot up to running DOOM 2016, on ultra settings 1440P 60FPS, it is a huge game changer. Although, I was a bit skeptical at first, my brother had already made the leap a few months before. I am glad he helped in changing my mind. Cheers to you K.
most thorough exposure of the drawbacks of these QLC drives that i have seen, great video
Your video contains lot of technical information. Keep posting this kind of videos. Really appreciate your work. Thank you.
This channels has legendary quality content. It is extremely concise and well produced.
The way he speaks brings me back to my childhood. It's like ASMR.. It's making me fall a sleep, and i love it..
I bit the bullet and bought a 1TB samsung QVO about 6 months ago and I am over the moon with reliability and speed on my old G62 HP. like you I will never have trusted a SSD over a year ago due to bad experiences with them a few years back..they all failed within a month !
All I will say I am a convert and if you aint got one then you are missing out on that extra oomph !
And I will add that Samsung must be congratulated on finally converting a serious SSD doubter like me , so well done !
This is great to hear. :)
Fascinating, you keep me up to date with new technology. Thanks from an old computer engineer.
Egad ... VAX 11/780 ... back to paper tape reader days!
Manufacturers should really make the effort of advertising clearly the differences between both technologies. If you look at these boxes, there is simply no clear mention of the current technology.
This is clearly a way for misleading some consumers.
Thanks as always for the fantastic video.
I had not thought of this -- you make a very good point indeed. Both the EVO and QVO Samsung SSDs are great drives, but they could be clearer pointing out the differences.
@@ExplainingComputers ,
I'm constantly explaining to people why QLC drives aren't horrible. There's massive confusion related to the performance drop that only happens after a large, sustained write. But people keep saying "don't buy QLC because the performance just drops off a cliff if you do much" when in reality very, very few people will every write that much data at once. The LOWER PRICE makes a QLC SSD more than ideal for most people... if you're some god-like being who explains computers you may have different needs but for us mere mortals QLC is fine.
@@photonboy999 I totally agree. I think we will see QLC drives become more and more popular with many users. As I said at the end of the video, we did not trust TLC not that many years ago.
It raises a point about marketing and how specs are very much manipulated. There is some what a comparison here to saying it's like buying a car that can do 100mph, but after 5 miles it's limited to 50mph. A bit of a grey area really. For normal daily use I can see that this would be fair enough (at least for the drives, not the car). But if this is not clear it could cause problems in certain usage scenarios.
@@photonboy999 Sadly you are mistaken, QLC Drives are good, the downside is the time it takes that drive to become worn out compared to a TLC or even an MLC drive. QLC Drives wear out faster writing the same amount of Data that a TLC writes, while they are a great cost to performance solution the issue comes down to long term redundancy and it is there that QLC lose their luster. So you wouldn't want to use one say for your system drive, but a steam drive would be applicable or movies and music, basically anything that doesn't constantly have writes, erasures and more writes.
YESSSS! I made the right decision! Thx for this video, I just bought 2 of these 1TB, and I was wondering if QVO or EVO would be the better choice. I went for EVO and now see I did the right thing because I too have large video files to shovel around. And the result of the comparison made my day. Thx Chris, good video as always.
I watched this video a few months ago, and now I'm really in the market for the 2TB Samsung QVO 860, and I came back here, and I was just so amazingly impressed that you packed so much information in here, and it was exactly what I was looking for! I'm glad that I'm subscribed and that I saw this video before, and now after watching it a second time, I think I'm ready to get the 2TB version. You even noted that Samsung claims that the TurboWrite buffer size for the 2/4 TB versions are 78 GB. I don't think I could get this wealth of information so concisely from anywhere else. Thanks a lot!
Great to hear this. The 2TB QVO offers a great price/performance ratio. I've had no problems running Linux Mint from my 1TB QVO.
@@ExplainingComputers Thanks for the reply! I bought it two days ago, on the same day that I made the comment above, and it is working very well so far!
Great video. I did not know that SSD’s came in different “flavors”. I saw the cost differences, but did not understand why. Now I do! THANKS!
As always, short and concise. Thanks for explaining!
Brilliant! I was looking at Samsung SSDs this morning and wondered what this meant! Perfect timing.
I'm sorry fellas but I'm a HDD guy, it allows me to take shit break while the game loading 👍🏻
Mr. Obaid on god something I didn’t dnt appreciate enough before getting SSDs
That explains why the long waits after your PC is finished loading it.
SToP eating around the clock!!
Smort xD
😅😂🤣
I know very little of computer hardware but try to stay informed when looking to upgrade my PC. This video was very simple and easy to understand. Thank you!
You were the first person who explained this so well.
This was the perfect level of complexity about SSDs for me. Very well explained, thank you
Thank you for perfecto explanation!!
I been wondering if I done mistake to buying QVO 1 TB instead of EVO..
This video helped me so much!!
My worries are gone.
Thank you
So do you think you still made the right choice by buying QVO?
Samsung engineer: we made a drive that stores data on it
Samsung marketing: we made a drive that makes a difference
lol
Nice.
Nice.
Correction: Samsung's marketing makes people pay same GB price as higher up drive of other makers.
I understood the SSD makes a difference compared to other hardware upgrades in a system.
Another excellent video Chris , I was a skeptic and very scared of life expectancy and now love my Samsung EVO 860 ! Thanks for this fine video and your excellent and unique style it’s simply the best !
This is the best explained video of QLC drives I've found. I've tried to explain to people the differences but they often just don't understand. I will be sharing this video for sure.
As someone who watches many videos in the tech side of TH-cam; I have to say this is probably one of the best I've ever watched. Not only is the theory there but also most aspects of practical information I could ever wish to find in a single video. Amongst other useful information there are comparisons between two current market leading SSDs, which is of high value to those buying SSDs right now, and also including current market price to give the viewer a better idea of price to performance, which is a significant concern for the average buyer.
now i understand why my friend said to avoid the samsung QVO. very glad i subscribed to this channel.
QVO works well when you always save data without making many changes to stored data.
I like all the single board computer demonstrations on this channel, very interesting stuff. However, I found this channel doing research on SSD's. So I love the videos, like this one, that go over all the technologies involved along with tests. Excellent video 👍
Thanks for watching.
This is vital information for me and I appreciate that you do the research and share it all so clearly and concisely. Explaining Computers is my most favorite TH-cam channel bar none. Please keep up the great work. And Thank You! :-)
If you want to bypass sales bs and really know how it works this channel is the one!
Another impressive well defined video. You sir, are invaluable to TH-cam and to all of your subscribers.
As you know from my previous posts, I have flash memory data expertise in building and designing hardware dating back to 2008 and even further if you consider spinning drives as well as being a contributor for m.2 and other newer open source standards. So I pay particularly close attention to these subjects more than others. That being said, I felt like your presentation was excellent! I have started using your clips occasionally in presentations. So hopefully you get even more followers as a result.
His video proves that solid state drives R just a ridiculous $cam = even slower than regular hard drives, + unreliable = pointless =)) Reminds me of guys chopping off their weenies pretending it turns them into girls HAHA
You're not seeing the 42 GB SLC cache on the TLC drive, because it takes more than a 75 GiB transfer to see it. The TLC cells can take writing faster than the QLC cells, so your data is moving through that SLC cache faster.
Since that was topic of the video, I would liked to have seen that point reached.
I was thinking that we wouldn't see the drop at the 42GB point for that reason (for either SSD), but I didn't consider that the difference in TLC and QLC write speeds would be emptying the cache at such significantly different rates.
I wonder if this also explains why the QVO also had faster write speeds during the cache phase: The EVO cache was spending more time sending data on permanent storage, and therefore had less time to receive the incoming data compared to the QVO's cache?
@@nekomatafuyu The QVO probably just has faster cache. It's newer technology. It really sucks that SLC drives are nowhere to be found. I bet they could fit a pretty good amount in a 3.5" form factor.
I have been using that 1 TB QVO since May in my laptop and for sure there is no cache like 42 GB not even 4 GB ready all the time. I copy music albums quite often their size hardly hitting 1 GB and the write speeds quickly drop to that shown on this video test (roughly 60 to 80 MB/s) and just in a few seconds. I now sort of regret I did not get Crucial MX500 instead since that was the SSD I was after initially.
@@tommik1283 the buffer may be filled with more than just that file you're trying to copy. Basically the cache is hiding the slow write speed. My guess is that the cache was still busy with previous write operations.
Let's say you're copying 1GB at a time. By the time you're copying your 42nd GB your operations will slow down because the previous are still being written to the drive.
When it is a boot drive, it might be that by the time you're copying your filea, the buffer is already filled with loads of operations from other programs, like temp files and virtual memory.
Clearly presented, no hype, no waffle. Thank you.
Thanks for a very clear explanation of the differences between these two types of drive.
I am still working with a EVO 840 250Gb for 4 years now and i still have no complains about the drive. I am at 1/2 way of its lifetime now. I used 60Tb while its lifetime expects to have in between 120 to 150Tb writing. But my next drive soon will be an EVO 860 1 Tb drive for certain.
I know that so many people here use EVO drives. They are great SSDs.
Like always a very well done presentation with all the relevant info!
Awesome Video Chris, Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
Everything clearly explained and simplified as I struggle to understand technical terms and or phases. Awesome channel.
Wow! I love this guy! Not only is he great at what he does, but he's a great character too! Very engaging! The videos have excellent production values! Always well worth a watch! Well done! 👍
Explaining Computers : Thank you Chris for teachings us the difference between TLC & QLC - SSD’s......Once again your timing is impeccable with today’s lesson , for my upcoming hard drive upgrade on my laptop 💻 from HDD >>> SSD !!! Thanks Scarboro 🇨🇦🍀😎💚
I like.... how you present..... your videos.... and give the correct..... technical information........ of the drives that...... you tested
Oh Lord! Thanks for such a valuable information a always you do Prof. Barnett.
And by the way we are talking about endurance and speeds and so on, I wanted to ask you about something I was told by the technician of my enterprise-environment machines recently upgraded with fancy Toshiba and Samsung SSDs (MLC) regards to how in certain way "to help to extend out" the life expectancy and reduce the erase cycles {which I understand are the ones taking "ssd life away"}
He suggested to create a Virtual drive in a high quality SD card (preferable over microSDs) or a "linked Folder (I do not even know what that is)" and since the VHD will be taken as an internal device this way Win10 software like OneDrive for instance could be moved off to that location OR the default download folders which we very often as it is intended of course we download and then delete most of the files we put in our PCs.
additionally in these VHD contained in the microsd/sd/USBs can serve as "cold storage" or something alike. and in this way we are not hurting the SSDs blocks by deleting a couple of pictures we do not want or that piece of software we downloaded and then we regretted doing it.
the whole idea is that save write/erase cycles.
---- SO WOULD YOU MAKE IN THE NEAR FUTURE A VIDEO EXPLAINING TO US HOW TO MAKE IT PROPERLY --- (My assistant's MS-Surface shall appreciate INDEED!).
I am polyglot and I swear I cannot even find a moderately well spoken or educated person explaining this topic.
I understand that since this once is done there are additional considerations to be done in Registry editor such as booting scripts to mount automatically the drive (the virtual one from the SD card)
well thank you very much again for your formidable and HIGHLY VALUABLE INFORMATION IN YOUR CHANNEL.
(BY THE WAY WATCH OUT I HEARD YOU SAYING "GONNA, WANNA" THAT IS UNFORGIVABLE FOR AN ACADEMIC PERSON LIKE YOU ;-D)
I love the fact that this channel keep its classic appeal and I'm very much appreciate the clear explanation.
THANK YOU!!!!
I understood their differrences clearly.
Great work kind sir :D
Awesome video once again. I would have liked to see you adding another 75Gb and see if the TLC would have dropped down at 78Gb or if it would just have kept on going strong and see how big the cache really is, since it wasn't 42Gb. Thanks again...
I am a memory expert and I can say you only touched the surface of NAND storage cell technology. I think the biggest thing you missed was that not all substrate dies are equal at a given level; there are SLC that are rated up to 100K writes, but others at 50K or even 10K. One indication is to look at the ECC requirement and see how many bits are expected to be corrected per 512 byte page slice. Therefore, there are MLC chips that are superior to lower quality SLC chips. Further, it should be noted that all NAND cells suffer from unreliability and MUST have a hardware ECC layer implemented, unlike NOR cells which can be rated reliable and require no error correction.
I totally agree with what you say -- I gave a very brief overview of the technology, as I did not want that part to dominate the rest of the video. My challenge in making videos is always deciding what to leave out. :)
I only have samsung TLC SSD, never had a problem so far, they work great.
I really do love your channel. Got me into tinkering on computers. Keep up the good work man.
Thanks for this. Great to hear that you are tinkering, always cool. :)
Extraordinary well explained! Thank you sir - subscribed and liked!
Welcome aboard!
Thanks, this was a very well made and thought out video with a very interesting topic that has caught my interest.
Thank you so much for all your hard work and the effort that you put into these videos that have both an educational value and entertainment one for the mind.
12:34 "Slightly bewildered by..."
I am not. I have the 840 Evo. This drive was known to have an issue. It was sold as a software issue. But it was never resolved. It was described by reviewers as a "crazy drop in performance", eventually after the problem manifested itself.
Essentially, the "fix" was to buy an 850.
I will never buy a Samsung SSD again based on Samsung's reputation alone. So videos like Chris's is valuable to me. We run backups that exceed the sizes in Chris's video, so....no QVO's for us for the time being.
Very well done explanation and test. About the only thing I could have hoped for more was seeing you test how full the fast write on the EVO could go and what it would throttle down to for comparison. Regardless, thanks a lot. I'm adding this video to a personal reference playlist. Cheers. 👍
Chris I sent this video to a close friend of mine who is looking into buying a 1TB QVO from Samsung and he really appreciated that you compared the EVO and QVO as he is still choosing between the two. He got interested in the QVO due seeing it go for around 50 USD for the 1TB version. If he do ends up getting one it will be for storage and games for sure.
QVO need to buy a larger volume of 2 TB version
Waiting for your Half a Million subscribers soon....💥
Yes, we are getting close to 500K subs here now, fingers crossed a few weeks away. :)
So basically TLC is better and worth the extra money for several reasons. Nice. Thank you and great video!
For normal use? Actually, no. Unless you move big files around on a very regular basis you are unlikely to notice the caching, and unless you are doing a lot of read-write cycles (e.g. by moving big files around) you are unlikely to hit the limit.
These drives have controllers that spread out the wear over the drive, so the lifetime of a drive is much longer than the quoted warranty. Which makes sense, as Samsung probably doesn't like having to pay for the warranty more than they need to.
If you want more info and a more nuanced view you can also watch the Linus Tech Tips review of the Intel 660p ("How SSD Technology Keeps Getting WORSE! - Intel 660p Review
"). The conclusion there: sure, you have less duty cycles before failure, but you're not going to get there with normal use, and you shouldn't rely on a single drive for critical data anyway (which is also true of a hard drive).
@@rikwisselink-bijker I just saw the Linus video and yea, you're right. But I still would prefer TLC over QLC for now. Thanks.
@@mclaine33 You're welcome. And tbh, I prefer TLC as well (or even better: SLC or MLC), but my wallet threatened to give me no food for a year, so I settled for QLC ;)
@@mclaine33 ,
Huh? He's right but you still prefer TLC?
Thank you very much. Very useful as usual
This channel is so underrated ! Love your videos.
Thanks.
This is the most informative video which clears the doubts about SSD, most of the people think thar all SSDs are same but that is not the case, thank you Chris.
Thank you! Convinced me to pay $40 more for the EVO.
Totally worth it! And it's on sale now for $99!
Good test, and to think i was about to recommend that QVO to a friend, wow not going to happen after this test.
I oredered the QVO and then request a return label and ordered the EVO instead
Why not? Okay, I'm using EVO, but I can recommend QVO to someone who want to save some money and use it for typical customer needs. I actually seen some TLC SSDs that worse than QVO in most of aspects.
@@A64632 For the current pricing, it makes more sense to spend a little extra and get a piece of hardware thats going to be a faster over time and last longer.
@@joem3115 At my opinion the theoretical lifetime for 860 EVO's memory chips is around 200 years in common home/office/game use, but for 860 QVO - something like 50 years. I guess practically it will die much faster cause of corrosion, or something like this. So... not too much difference in expected lifetime.
Speed - they have almost the same read speed, and almost the same write speed for the first 42Gb. The only home\office\game scenario when you will be limited with write speed is installing modern game. So.. if you are doing it quite often - than writing speed after first 42Gb matters. Otherwise not. Btw, it's may be probably better for you to look for Samsung 970 EVO Plus to get better speeds.
So.. I prefer 860 EVO, but I can recommend 860 QVO for someone who have to save some money. It's also quite good thing I think. At my personal opinion 860 QVO better than many other SSD's based on TLC memory (WD Blue for example), even a little cheaper some of them.
@@A64632 don't get me wrong, they're both good drives but for around $20 more it just seems like a no brainer but for the people still trying to build the rest of their PC, then perhaps the QVO will be fine. As for the 970 EVO Plus goes I actually have that as a boot drive and it's speeds are incredible.
If anyone is curious, CrystalDiskMark is basically a useful GUI wrapper for the Microsoft DiskSpd command line application which is available on github.
That's a relief.... My qvo is about to be delivered tomorrow 😅. Thanks for the detailed comparison.
Enjoy your new SSD. :)
@@ExplainingComputers thank you.
I transfer by the 100GB and occasionally by the TB. These demos are helpful.
WoW :) very informative video.... I personally did not know about the difference :)
Thanks so much, it was very informative and something I need to take note of.
Excellent comparison. Would be great to see results for the Samsung Pro series alongside these 2!
Fantastic info! This video is by far the best at differentiating between the two drive technologies. Thank you 😊
Thank god for people who know to explain things in detail. most excellent :)
Nice to see that the EVO is better than specs. Nice guy Samsung :)
Samuel Schwager
My assumption is that the turbo cache is acting as a FIFO and the TLC drive never fully filled the FIFO since it could offload the data faster than the QLC drive. The two drives probably have the same amount of cache.
I’m guessing if you transferred more data you would eventually hit a point where you fill the FIFO and reveal the true write speed of the TLC.
@@sloth4urluv Might be. Reading > 100GB from a RAM disk and writing it to the EVO might work to test that.
RAM disk isn't going to speed up the SATA interface. NVME is already tons faster than SATA 3, so it's just the EVO's actual performance.
Could just be that is the write speed for the TLC even without the SLC buffer.
Thank you very much. It was clear and even for non engeneers, too.
The Evo SLC cache is likely not specced wrong, but you forgot to take into account that the cache also continuously gets flushed to the bulk zone while the transfer is happening. Since that bulk storage is faster you'll need more data transferred before it can't keep up. You'd probably have seen a dip if your data set was larger.
Either way all it proves is that hard drives are infinitely superior. If U really need 'fast random access', just get more RAM =P U can also locate cache files & things into RAM with other programs, like web browsers 2 a 'RAM disc' folter, etc.
Thanks for the great explanation Chris.
I was between the TLC and the QLC drives, and thanks to you I made up my mind, considering the workload I'm going to put the drive through.
Kind regards, keep up the good work.
These videos must take a lot of time, research, shooting, editing, etc. I really appreciate the effort, and learn a lot from them.
Thanks.
Thanks. This particular video did seem like it was in production forever!
Amazing to see the ultra-fast evolution of SSDs, when you consider that it was almost a luxury item a few years ago! Their current price-quality ratio makes them almost a must for any basic computer use now. Thank you for this presentation of the technological advances of these mass storage devices!
I still remember the day when we say “ewwww” to the TLC nand flash. Now companies are pushing the less good QLC.
QLC is cheaper. it's like how people are complaining that super car companies are pushing small engines with turbos instead of the big v8's of the past. it's all about maintaining similar performance for less price. Yes, small engines with turbos (QLC) may not be as reliable as the big old engines (TLC), but it won't matter since even newer technology will be available by the time the current tech (QLC) dies.
PLC is coming next. more ewww
That's because V-NAND have boosted the reliability and speed of flash memory. So you can have TLC V-NAND that is faster and more reliable than older MLC NAND. I'd trust TLC V-NAND for my system drive and be okay with QLC for my media storage drive.
Hey PoPe, what do you make of MiCRoN's 5100/5200 MaX series?
They are supposed to be better than their PRo & eCo counterparts, but are they the same as a PRO version from SaMSuNG??
@@angrysocialjusticewarrior Good analogy
Lovely video as always! But I'm still paranoid so I'll stick to MLC (SLC if I can) and back it all up on HDD.
Thank you. I'm not a "geek" yet still found this very easy to understand and informative. And, you are "very easy to listen to."
Glad it was helpful!
Thanks i was all time thinking what is the difference between them ...Great video
Great videos! Pure tech contend " state of art videos"
With the drop in price of QLC I finally ditched spinning HDDs in my main system. I keep 2x2TB drives in a NAS for movies but my main PC now has 2x1TB Kingston A400 drives for game storage and a 512GB M.2 drive for windows and programs.
I think we'll see this become the norm in desktop computing in the next 3-5 years, the only reason I have the NAS is becasue of the reduced life-cycle of QLC.
Which M.2 drive do you use? And is it Sata or NVMe? Got any temps problems? Thanks.
@@gabcenz I use an NVMe Intel 660p drive, 512GB. Read/Writes at about 1.7gbps (about 2-3x as fast as a sata drive) and it was only $60 for the 512GB. My case is the Fractal Design Focus G and I have 6 fans in it so I've never had problems with temps (FX 8350+ GTX 1660ti for reference)
@@DaxtonAnderson Thanks. Looks like a good option to consider. I'm looking for a new SSD to boot Windows and installing programs. I was a bit worried because I've heard that some m.2 (NVMe or Sata, not sure) may overheat and in some cases cause thermal throttling. Well personally I have a good case and good ventilation too, so I hope I should be ok with any m.2 drive.
Great video, informative indeed, I wish we had bank holiday Monday specials.
Many thanks for this lucid explanation. I now feel better informed, although I'm still a bit nervous about those two Kingson SSDs hanging off the side of my computer. I've never got round to closing up the case, as there's something makes me think it's going to go wrong at any moment -- but so far, so good. I must do a speed check, as I suspect they are rather slow. But they sure are quiet!!!
Really great explanation, thanks for all the technical info! I think many people will find this helpful, as I certainly did.
In my experience, QLC isn't good for a system drive, but fantastic for the storage\game driver, as a secondary one.
My system Crucial 1TB ssd got 5% wear after a year, my 4TB Samsung QVO got just 1%, even though I constantly download new TV shows, movies and on it, save lots of files AND it's most often 3\4 occupied, while also having the pagefile on it. While the system 1TB only stopped to wear out rapidly(I was losing like 1% each 2-3 months) when I freed like half of it. Simply because, a system drive writes data automatically all the time, hence I AT LEAST would recommend TLC memory for a system ssd, MLC ideally if you can afford it.
Or U could use a SPINNING REGULAR HARD DRIVE since they have FASTER transfer rate than SSD (according 2 this test!) & INFINITE re-write cycles = fux sake =)) U talk like a junkie trying 2 decide which poison 2 take. Break the brainwash chains, dood =)
Presumably at the 42gb gigabyte point the TLC drive had (in the background) offloaded much more from the SLC cache to the main drive than the QLC drive had managed to at the same point, and it was able to do so because TLC is faster than QLC. In fact it seems like the SLC cache in the TLC drive was never actually at capacity, where as the SLC cache in the QLC drive hit capacity after about 45gb copied.
You make a great point I didn't think of. Still, I think TLC would still run in capacity limits eventually, it just is able to delay that limit way further than QLC. Otherwise having a SLC cache on a TLC drive wouldn't make sense. Naturally we would need a greater volume of data to write to the TLC to show the same effect as the QLC.
You didn't give an explanation for the difference in write speed after the 42 GB cache was filled. The difference is due to the different inherent write speeds of the TLC and QLC cells. If I remember correctl(from nvme drive reviews, maybe the tech deals channel), the TLC sequential write speed is limited to something like 1500 MB/S, so you're still bottlenecked by the SATA interface. I bet they only put in SLC cache for sustainability or scaling (in the production process) reasons. My hypothesis is that you saw a little dip in writing speed after the SLC cache was filled because the internal controller needed to switch to writing directly to the TLC cells. The inherent write speed of QLC is a lot lower as you clearly demonstrated!
Great video anyway! Really like your channel!
I have both drives in a build, but neither is used for booting Windows. The QVO is used for temporary work, while the EVO is mainly storage. I have 512GB Samsung 970 PRO NVMe, which is the boot drive and another 1TB which is used for video encoding. I don't think it was mistake buying these drives, and your wonderful video confirms that.
Thank you very much Christopher for share your videos with us.
Your videos are exelent and have value information. I just imagine how much time you take to make them. Big hug
Thanks. This video was in production forever! Eight days in fact. Which cannot work on a weekly schedule. :)
Finally! A video to link for when the classic "computer expert" on the internet starts to talk nonsense about that ssd's are "imposible to fail"