micron-m600-ssd-product-photo

According to a press release, Micron recently announced the new M600 SSD, which is Micron’s latest entry into the client SSD space. Available to OEMs only, the Micron M600 will be Micron’s new flagship client SSD, succeeding the Micron M550 in both performance, power efficiency, and reliability.

Internally, the new Micron M600 is pretty similar to the recently launched Crucial MX100 we reviewed previously. It’ll be equipped with both Micron’s latest 128Gb 16nm Synchronous MLC NAND along with Marvell’s 88SS9189 controller. Nothing to shocking there.

Manufacturer Micron Micron Micron Micron
Model M600 M600 M600 M600
Form Factor 7mm 2.5″ SATA, mSATA, M.2 2260/2280 7mm 2.5″ SATA, mSATA, M.2 2260/2280 7mm 2.5″ SATA, mSATA, M.2 2260/2280 7mm 2.5″ SATA, mSATA, M.2 2260/2280
Capacity 128GB 256GB 512GB 1TB
Controller Marvell 88SS9189 Marvell 88SS9189 Marvell 88SS9189 Marvell 88SS9189
NAND 16nm Micron Synchronous MLC 16nm Micron Synchronous MLC 16nm Micron Synchronous MLC 16nm Micron Synchronous MLC
Sequential Reads 560 MB/s 560 MB/s 560 MB/s 560 MB/s
Sequential Writes 400 MB/s 510 MB/s 510 MB/s 510 MB/s
4K Random Read 90,000 IOPS 100,000 IOPS 100,000 IOPS 100,000 IOPS
4K Random Write 88,000 IOPS 88,000 IOPS 88,000 IOPS 88,000 IOPS
Interface SATA 3 6GB/s SATA 3 6GB/s SATA 3 6GB/s SATA 3 6GB/s
Endurance 100TBW 200TBW 300TBW 400TBW
Warranty 3 Years 3 Years 3 Years 3 Years

What is surprising is the rated performance and endurance figures. Despite being nearly identical to the Crucial MX100 in terms of hardware, the Micron M600 is significantly faster. This is because Micron has made some significant improvements to the firmware to make the M600 far better than its retail cousin, the Crucial MX100.

The biggest improvement is a new feature that Micron calls Dynamic Write Acceleration, or DWA for short. The way DWA works is that it basically turns unused NAND in the drive into simulated SLC. This simulated SLC is then used as a write cache, similar to what we see in Samsung’s TuboWrite or SanDisk’s nCache. However, unlike Samsung or SanDisk’s solutions which only set aside a tiny portion of NAND, Micron’s DWA is far more powerful in that it’s capable of dynamically adjusting the size of the SLC cache, utilizing as much as all the free space available on the drive.

micron-dynamic-write-acceleration-performance-trace

Illustrated above is a chart found in a tech brief for Micron’s DWA technology. We can see that the Micron M600 is capable of maintaining maximum performance until ~46% drive saturation. Then performance dips as the drive’s dynamic SLC cache begins converting itself into its original MLC form. Finally, the drive’s performance hits steady state where the drive’s SLC cache is converted entirely into MLC and all writes are written into the main MLC NAND. What this basically means is as long as you keep the drive relatively empty <50% full more or less, you’ll be able to enjoy ultra-fast performance thanks to the DWA cache.

Along with performance is also increased endurance. Although DWA does increase write amplification as it has to write data from the SLC cache to the main MLC NAND, Micron has compensated for this by using proprietary NAND trims to significantly improve NAND endurance. As such, the Micron M600 is capable of up to 100TBW on the 128GB version, 200TBW on the 256GB version, 300TBW on the 512GB version and 400TBW on the 1TB version of the drive despite the Crucial MX100 only capable of up to 72TBW across the board.

The Micron M600 will be available in a variety of form factors including 2.5″ SATA, mSATA, M.2 2280, and M.2 2260. The drives should be available to OEMs via Micron’s distributors. No word on pricing at this time.

 

Source: Micron