Random Read Performance

Our first test of random read performance uses very short bursts of operations issued one at a time with no queuing. The drives are given enough idle time between bursts to yield an overall duty cycle of 20%, so thermal throttling is impossible. Each burst consists of a total of 32MB of 4kB random reads, from a 16GB span of the disk. The total data read is 1GB.

Burst 4kB Random Read (Queue Depth 1)

The QD1 burst random read performance of the Samsung 970 EVO Plus is an improvement over its predecessor, but not as large as was promised by the spec sheet. The Samsung drives are also still lagging far behind the fastest combinations of IMFT NAND and Silicon Motion controllers.

Our sustained random read performance is similar to the random read test from our 2015 test suite: queue depths from 1 to 32 are tested, and the average performance and power efficiency across QD1, QD2 and QD4 are reported as the primary scores. Each queue depth is tested for one minute or 32GB of data transferred, whichever is shorter. After each queue depth is tested, the drive is given up to one minute to cool off so that the higher queue depths are unlikely to be affected by accumulated heat build-up. The individual read operations are again 4kB, and cover a 64GB span of the drive.

Sustained 4kB Random Read

On the longer test of random read performance that also brings in some higher queue depths, the Samsung 970 EVO Plus is more competitive and comes out tied or ahead of last year's best. But not shown here are the preliminary results from our tests of SM2262EN drives (next in the review queue) which are substantially faster than the 970 EVO Plus.

Sustained 4kB Random Read (Power Efficiency)
Power Efficiency in MB/s/W Average Power in W

The 970 EVO Plus uses more power during the random read test than any other drives in this bunch, leaving it with some of the worse efficiency scores despite the good performance.

The random read performance of the 250GB 970 EVO Plus begins to fall behind the 1TB model as queue depths increase, and the smaller drive seems to be close to saturating by QD16. At QD32 the 250GB model's random read throughput is less than half that of the 1TB model. The 250GB 960 EVO delivered substantially higher random read performance at high queue depths than the small 970 EVO Plus manages.

The relatively high power consumption of the 970 EVO Plus is apparent when plotting its test results against the rest of the database. At lower queue depths it delivers speeds that are achievable by SATA SSDs but uses more power than almost all of them. Once the queue depth has increased sufficiently to take the 970 EVO Plus beyond the SATA limit, it still uses more power than most of the remaining competition.

Random Write Performance

Our test of random write burst performance is structured similarly to the random read burst test, but each burst is only 4MB and the total test length is 128MB. The 4kB random write operations are distributed over a 16GB span of the drive, and the operations are issued one at a time with no queuing.

Burst 4kB Random Write (Queue Depth 1)

The burst random write performance of the 970 EVO Plus takes a slight step backwards from its predecessor, leaving it far behind the best competitors, which are currently led by the Phison E12-based Corsair MP510, 67% faster than the 970 EVO Plus.

As with the sustained random read test, our sustained 4kB random write test runs for up to one minute or 32GB per queue depth, covering a 64GB span of the drive and giving the drive up to 1 minute of idle time between queue depths to allow for write caches to be flushed and for the drive to cool down.

Sustained 4kB Random Write

When the longer random write test brings in some higher queue depths, the 1TB 970 EVO Plus regains a high-end standing but doesn't quite catch up to the WD Black SN750. The 250GB model is a bit further behind the lead thanks to the fast write cache of the ADATA SX8200, which performs identically to that of the related 1TB HP EX920.

Sustained 4kB Random Write (Power Efficiency)
Power Efficiency in MB/s/W Average Power in W

The 970 EVO Plus improves upon the random write power efficiency of its predecessors and ranks very highly, but the WD Black SN750 provides 26% better performance per Watt on this test, and the ADATA SX8200 beats the 250GB 970 EVO Plus by 21%.

The Samsung 970 EVO Plus reaches full random write speed by QD4 and is reasonably steady through the rest of the test. The 1TB model saturates at a slightly higher level than the WD Black SN750, but its overall score suffered due to the slower QD1 performance. The ADATA SX8200 that provides excellent low-QD random write performance at low capacities does run out of SLC cache for part of the test and drops below the 250GB 970 EVO Plus's performance level for a while before recovering.

Comparing the 970 EVO Plus against all the results in the database shows the 1TB drive starts out with QD1 performance just beyond the limit for SATA drives, and power requirements don't increase much as throughput climbs. At higher queue depths the 970 EVO Plus falls roughly in the middle of the normal power consumption range for high-end drives.

AnandTech Storage Bench - Light Sequential Performance
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  • Chaitanya - Tuesday, January 22, 2019 - link

    Quite a minor upgrade over previous drive.
  • jeremyshaw - Tuesday, January 22, 2019 - link

    Hence the name.
  • Billy Tallis - Tuesday, January 22, 2019 - link

    More substantial than the WD Black SN750.

    I don't think we'll see any more big jumps until PCIe 4.0 ships. Pretty much everybody has caught up on the NAND side, and most of the controller vendors have had decent NVMe controllers out for a while. There's no low-hanging fruit like there was when companies were still trying to make SM2260 or Phison E7 compete against Samsung with inferior NAND.
  • DanNeely - Tuesday, January 22, 2019 - link

    More to the point it is a consistent incremental improvement. There've been far too many cases over the years when a v.next drive was an incremental improvement in manufacturing cost, that regressed in most to all performance numbers.
  • boozed - Tuesday, January 22, 2019 - link

    I call those performance improvements significant (just).
  • Flunk - Thursday, January 24, 2019 - link

    I don't think it's enough to elevate this drive over the high-end Silicon Motion drives in real-world uses. Not for consumers at least.
  • nectrone - Thursday, January 24, 2019 - link

    96-layer nand is an improvement on production speed, yields, and manufacturing cost, rather than perf. And tbh, we don't need better perf at all, or maybe a bit in 4k random, because 150MBps is a bit low in 2019. Instead, what we need, is prices to drop, below twice the price of an hdd of the same capacity.
    In 2018, 1TB tlc nvme 64-layer ssd was 10 times the price of an hdd, now in Jan it's 5 times. Sata 64-layer ssd were 7 times the price of hdd, now it's 3. I'd like TLC nvme to cost twice an hdd, and sata tlc to be the same price as an hdd. With 96-layer, we'll get closer to that.
  • haukionkannel - Tuesday, January 22, 2019 - link

    Pity that the consumer version does not get 4.0 this year... I was hoping to have 4.0 compatible ssd when AMD 570x boards comes out. Well most like with my usage even these Are fast enough and I am not going to be Bottle negged by 3.0.
  • sorten - Wednesday, January 23, 2019 - link

    I had the same reaction. I'm running an old gaming PC and I'm ready to switch to AMD with a full set of upgrades at the end of the year and was hoping for PCIE 4.0, but my SSD is so old that I know any drive will be a huge improvement.
  • ikjadoon - Tuesday, January 22, 2019 - link

    Meta: has the scrolling video ad been moved to the right? It finally doesn't cover up the article when you scroll. Huge thank you.

    970 EVO Plus: I'm excited for this to get added to the SSD 2018 Bench. Curious how close it matches the 970 PRO 512GB, now at $170. My almost-full 250GB 960 EVO needs a capacity increase and $40 isn't a big difference for a minimum two-year purchase.

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