Thankfully, the 510 isn't the G3. The proper successor to the X25-M will be the upcoming 320 series.
But that begs the question: If Intel thinks the 320s will be the better/faster drives, who the hell came up with the names? The higher number usually denotes the faster product.Yes, this does 510 model does look like a stopgap measure until the 320 series is released, likely reacting to pressure from sandforce and marvel based drives.
The very preliminary 320 specs showed a big jump in random IOPS from the G2 series -- as we've seen sequential speeds aren't everything, so maybe the true G3 drive will be a contender, not just a cheaper lower performance device.
The performance on these drives using the same controller is determined by firmware more than anything. Micron has had a chance to work with the Marvell controller for a long time now, and the fact that the C300 is on par or above the new 500's from Intel speaks volumes to the maturity of Micron's firmware. I would bet that when they release the C400 it will show numbers above their C300 in all respects.The C400 should perform the same way, right?
which supports my assertions. The 510 is an interim 3rd party drive to buy intel time to get their act together.
This is probably true since they have already pushed forward to include SATA3 on their mobo (all should thank AMD for this since they pushed SATA3 on their 8XX series chipset), they will need something that can make use of it.
I'm curious on what you all think between a Vertex 3 and Intel 510 or maybe even a Intel G2? I'm interested in the fastest drive which is a Vertex 3, but I'm also interested in reliability which is Intel's 510.
Hey guys, I'm still a bit confused on which direction I should go... I'm planning on building a High-End Gaming System by Mid March. The board I'll be buying is a ASUS Maximus IV, it has 2 SATA 6.0 Gb/s ports. So, I was hoping to take advantage of a new Intel 510 Drive, but the reviews have been a bit disappointing, especially seeing how a Vertex 3 trumped the 510 in most bench marks. That coupled with the fact that those benchmarks a based on the 250GB SSDs has me confused. I'm only really interested in a 120GB to use as a boot drive and to install games on while using a F3 Spinpoint for Storage.
I just read the review and am pretty surprised by how poorly it did. A 64GB C300 has better random performance than a 256GB drive based on the same controller?
Random write performance is also pretty low by today's standards, however the impact on most of our real world performance tests is minimal. It looks like we may have hit the upper limit of what we need from 4KB random write performance (at least given current workloads).
Of course, now that I'm thinking about it, I can't help but be a bit angry at Crucial. If the C300 is using the same controller, why is there no firmware update to bring performance up to the level of the 510, or at least the C400(whatever that ends up being)?
They're not the same controller. The C400 will use the same controller as the new Intel drives, but the C300 is the older Marvell controller. Micron is still working on their new drive. Intel beat them to market. With a new controller generation, and everybody developing and refining their own firmware, there is lots of room for improvement as new firmware releases come out.Of course, now that I'm thinking about it, I can't help but be a bit angry at Crucial. If the C300 is using the same controller, why is there no firmware update to bring performance up to the level of the 510, or at least the C400(whatever that ends up being)?