LOL.. sad thing is that those guys think I'm full of it because of one bad assumption on my part. There are so many other bad assumptions being made over there about Sandforce it's not even funny. The fact is that those statements in "general terms" are still very much valid.
So in the end?.. I harldy doubt me being proven wrong about one Sandforce fact cancels out all the other misinformation and assumptions made by others.
Not to mention aside from that extreme endurance testing?.. who the hell would ever see it anyways? Is moot'er than moot for anyone not writing 35 Terabytes within a short timeframe. lol
I've written over 1 Terabyte in less than 4 hours to my drive and SE restores full fresh speeds without issue. Good enough for me, I guess.
I was wrong. Big whoop.. what'ya want me to say besides that? Sorry for hurting "sensitive nerd" feelings? hehe
So here it is for all those who are so into rubbing noses in **** around here.
Sandforce does have "Lifetime throttling" written into the code. Write numerous Terabyte's worth of data in a very short timeframe?.. then you get "Lifetime Throttled" until Sandforce's code implemented by the mfgr for that particular drive(which in that case was only the smallest slowest of them all to be sure) decides that the data flow over a given amount of time has decreased enough to let off the throttle. SE will NOT release this. "Yayyy... they were right and that coc*y OCZ basta** was wrong!" LOL
Then from there we have the "real life" throttles that only typically used scenarios would ever see. Such as the "Settled State Throttle" which is considered the normal day to day running speed once all nand has been written and the Durawrite/GC map has been fully formed. Yep.. you can SE your way right out of this.
Then we have the "power user", "benchmark fanatic", and "I don't care if it's not SLC.. I want to use it in my server anyways" type of throttle called a "Hammered State". Yep.. you guessed it.. you can SE you way back to fresh from this state as well.
So not much more than ego's are going to be petted up here since no one would ever hit that type of throttle. Especially since most don't use a small 40GB bottom of the Sandforce tier drive like that to try and write 35 Terabytes worth of data. So your point?.. is rather pointless aside from some petty satisfaction gained from it.
Guess it also proves I'm not as extreme as I thought I was with my drives and I'll have to beat them even harder next time I test them.
