4K random reads aren't too important, just for 4K accesses. 4K represents an aligned worst-case, and most drives natively write at either 4k or 8k granularity, IIRC. A drive with excellent 4K performance will also have excellent 32K performance, FI, and 32-128K are going to be fairly common, reading/writing config files, cached web files, page file(s), search indices, etc..
For SD cards, I wish they would include 32K tests (FAT32), but that's getting OT.
Sadly, you can't always find what drives use all the channels, which is usually a good indicator of performance, relative to the review model, which almost always uses them all. Even the 'good' brands are known to do this, too, for smaller models.
Max. sustained random 4k read/write:
90GB – 20,000/50,000 IOPS
120GB – 20,000/60,000 IOPS
240GB – 40,000/57,000 IOPS
480GB – 60,000/45,000 IOPS
Taken from SR's review. Note the disparity in sustained IOPS. In the future, pay close attention to such specs. Peak IOPS are generally irrelevant.
I feel like I just got robbed by Newegg.
By
Kingston. If you
just got it, wipe it and RMA it. You'll get stuck with a restocking fee, I'm sure, but you'll probably be happier with a 128GB M4 or 830.
P.S. No refund/swap from Newegg? Yeah, that does suck. You might be able to sell it for less loss than the restocking fee would be, though. It's a nice drive, from what I can see, but favors writes, and high-QD. Really, it would probably be OK for you, as well, except that you'd constantly have in the back of your mind that it wasn't what you were expecting (read: intending to be paying for), and that's always irritating.