Testseek.at haben 10 Experten-Bewertungen der G.Skill 2.5 inch Titan Series SATA300 und die durchschnittliche Bewertung beträgt 86% erhoben. Blättern Sie nach unten und sehen Sie alle Beiträge zu G.Skill 2.5 inch Titan Series SATA300.
(86%)
10 Tests
Durchschnittliche Punktzahl von Experten, die dieses Produkt bewertet haben.
Zusammenfassung: Gleich zwei SATA-Controller setzt G.Skill bei der Solid State Drive Titan FM-25S2S-128GBT1 ein. Ob das Duo dem MLC-Modell ohne Pufferspeicher wirklich Beine macht, klärt unser Test. Die Solid State Drive G.Skill Titan FM-25S2S-128GBT1 nutzt statt ei...
Zusammenfassung: Rund 53 Jahre ist es mittlerweile her, dass IBM das erste magnetische Festplattenlaufwerk „IBM 350“ vorgestellt hat. Seitdem gab es beträchtliche Fortschritte bei der Technik und die rotierenden Scheiben eroberten die Welt. Doch am Grundprinzip des mag...
Rückblickend macht die G.Skill Titan einen sehr guten Eindruck. In unserem Benchmark-Parcours kann das Solid State Drive durchgehend mit hochklassigen Performance-Ergebnissen überzeugen und macht Intels X25-M, die noch immer als Maß aller SSDs antreten...
Final Words & Conclusion Gorgeous and very fast is what the Titan offers in terms of the Titan product series. I was literally blown away by the performance this SSD has to offer. We however need to address something in this conclusion. Previous mode...
Impressive 246 MBps read and 168 write bandwidth in ATTO, Internal RAID-0 architecture brings value MLC near to premium SLC, Low power consumption may extend battery life, Lightweight compact storage solution, Resistant to extreme shock impact, Up to 2...
Metal case is heavier and less durable than plastic, Lacks integrated USB 2.0 MiniB data connection, Small 16KB cache buffer per SSD controller
Benchmark Reviews begins each conclusion with a short summary for each of the areas we rate. The first is presentation, which takes product packaging into consideration to the extent that it provides adequate packing material and consumer information f...
Up to 200MB/s and faster sustained read speeds, Up to 160MB/s sustained write speeds on large files, Dual internal JMicron Controllers in RAID 0 eliminates the stutter problems of previous generation, Lower power consumption than traditional HDDs, Cap...
Mediocre write performance with small file sizes, Cost per GB (still an issue for all SSDs, and not exclusive to this drive).
These are very exciting times for the enthusiast computer user. Steady improvements in performance coupled with dropping prices should make SSDs one of the most sought-after upgrades for 2009. The G.Skill Titan is a good step in the right direction, ...
Frankly we’ve been amazed by the G.Skill Titan’s performance through-out our testing. We’d fully expected another SSD in the mould of the single drive controller based drives we looked at last year, showing signs of promise with solid re...
System Is Snappier, Fantastic RAID Like Speed, Quiet, Never Gets Hot, Standard SATA Interface, Easy To Hide In The Chassis, Did We Mention Fast
Price Still Higher Than Traditional Platter Drives, Not Getting One Sooner
The G.Skill Titan 256 GB SSD consistently performed well. It didnt top all the charts in testing but it performed well all around. Other drives were jumping all around in the charts while the Titan churned out consistently good numbers. Consistent op...
Great performance, Large 256GB size, Improved stutter handling, Dual controllers, Very good $/GB ratio versus other SSDs
Write performance still less than X25M, Stutter issue still exists, Only 2 year warranty, Increased thermal output, Dual controllers are still JM602s
There certainly is no denying it; the dual JMicron with a RAID controller in the Titan does improve the performance of this drive over much of the competition. In some cases the performance increase was drastic and quite impressive. However, like most ...
Veröffentlicht: 2009-01-27, Autor: Chris , Testbericht von: tweaktown.com
Solid state drives are still not for everyone. Two thirds of the requirements have now been met, speed and capacity. As of right now the cost is still holding many back, at least in the notebook user category. Desktop users are most likely holding o...