Sabrent Rocket Q 8TB NVMe PCIe M.2 2280 Internal SSD High Performance Solid State Drive R/W 3300/2900MB/s (SB-RKTQ-8TB)
Below are the top discussions from Reddit that mention this Amazon listing.
Electronics Computers & Accessories Data Storage Internal Solid State Drives
- M.2 PCIe Gen3 x 4 Interface.
- Built to the PCIe 3.1 specification / NVMe 1.3 Compliant.
- Power Management Support for APST / ASPM / L1.2.
- Supports SMART and TRIM commands. Supports ONFi 2.3, ONFi 3.0, ONFi 3.2 and ONFi 4.0 interface.
- All Sabrent SSDs come with FREE Sabrent Acronis True Image for Sabrent Software for easy Cloning. For those who require a specific sector size to clone their existing SSDs: A newly released Sabrent utility enables users to re-format the Rocket drive and choose the sector size of their liking, either 512-bytes or 4K bytes.
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SABRENT
Reddit Posts and Comments
0 posts • 34 mentions • top 30 shown below
2 points • AwaitingCombat
The 8tb bare drive is $1500 on Amazon ... is the enclosure really worth $100?
2 points • lordwumpus
I believe this is the biggest currently on the market: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08957PT2K/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_A.w8EbPNQEBPA
1 points • cazsol2
https://www.amazon.com/Sabrent-Rocket-Internal-Performance-SB-RKTQ-8TB/dp/B08957PT2K around 4K USD
1 points • feudalle
I'm sure they will but not anytime soon. There really isnt anything pushing space in the consumer market.
That being said you can pick up a 8tb nvm drive and put it in an enclosure. That would run off of a USB. But the enclosure is around $50, and the drive is like $1500.
Sabrent Rocket Q 8TB NVMe PCIe M.2 2280 Internal SSD High Performance Solid State Drive R/W 3300/2900MB/s (SB-RKTQ-8TB) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08957PT2K/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_PtS9EbGYBPSRR
1 points • zyck_titan
I'm all for more high density SSDs. So long as the prices remain reasonable.
These days I can buy decent SSDs for ~$110 per TB. One of the trends that I've seen is these high density models increasing the cost per TB because of the density advantage.
And I get that, but I don't think $1400 is the right price for an 8TB SSD. Even if it is NVMe.
I hope that Corsair prices this SSD competitively, $900-$1000 at the high end.
1 points • GreenNapster
Deal link: Amazon
^^Note: ^^The ^^deal ^^may ^^have ^^expired ^^by ^^the ^^time ^^you ^^see ^^this ^^post.
1 points • AK-Brian
Sabrent also makes an 8TB drive (albeit using QLC and Gen3).
1 points • Noir_Ocelot
You guys should be excited about the NVME slot, it doesn't look proprietary like Microsoft's XBOX Series X/S. Granted NVME storage is quite expensive, you'll be saving money over the lifetime of this console as the prices go down. Hell, if you like to blow your money out of the water, they have 8 TB NVME storage available now!
1 points • joefresco2
Well, considering you can put 2 8TB drives in the system... that's pretty massive. https://www.amazon.com/Sabrent-Rocket-Internal-Performance-SB-RKTQ-8TB/dp/B08957PT2K
Granted, $$$$
1 points • anrico17
> Plus gw baca2 max upgrade SSD nya cuma 1 TB
Ya dari sananya
Lu upgrade sendiri ke 8tb jg bisa, tapi bakal seharga laptopnya juga
1 points • void_nemesis
Unfortunately he's talking about an actual 8TB NVMe drive, which costs a fair bit.
1 points • ChristianMom29
You're the stupid one. That's the number of PCIe lanes.
1 points • sigh_riss
Why not an 8TB nvme ssd?
1 points • Baldrs_Draumar
Sabrent recently released a consumer 8 TB SSD.
https://www.amazon.com/Sabrent-Rocket-Internal-Performance-SB-RKTQ-8TB/dp/B08957PT2K
1 points • kizzle69
I believe there is already an off brand that is making 8TB SSDs and NVMe drives. let me google it.... Yep, it's the brand Sabrent. And they want $1,500 for it. lol!
The capability of large SSD's and NVMe's became very simple once they started taking writes from long term usage and using it for more storage. (TLC/3D vs MLC.) 120GB drives from 2015 used the same amount of total NAND modules as 480GB SSDs do today. Why we aren't seeing them in large numbers and at decent prices? My guess is they don't want to put their spinning disk side out of business just yet.
2 points • Fantastins
Orico make an m.2 raid device thats usb-c out. https://www.orico.shop/en/aluminum-dual-bay-10gbps-m2-raid-external-hard-dri.html
Why? No idea. but you can throw 2x 8tb in there. https://www.amazon.com/Sabrent-Rocket-Internal-Performance-SB-RKTQ-8TB/dp/B08957PT2K
1 points • dzielin
Probably Sabrent Rocket Q
https://www.amazon.com/Sabrent-Rocket-Internal-Performance-SB-RKTQ-8TB/dp/B08957PT2K
1 points • Netwerkz101
>Unfortunately, you can only fit a 7mm high 2,5" HDD into the NUC. 7mm high HDD's have a max capacity of 2TB. That would make it 4TB in total.
Sabrent Rocket Q 8TB NVMe PCIe M.2 2280
​
Oh...there are option$ ....
It's just a matter of money and figuring out how to dissipate heat in the space of a NUC.
1 points • suyashsngh250
You can swap out the second SSD with Sabrent 8TB SSD, https://www.amazon.com/Sabrent-Rocket-Internal-Performance-SB-RKTQ-8TB/dp/B08957PT2K I would recommend the 6TB as its half the price. As for a clean install of Windows with all the drivers, see this video https://youtu.be/x9BGn4MivJw... Its very easy and simple.
1 points • FreeTailBites
8TB 3.5" HDD: $155. 8TB m.2 NVME SSD: $1,400. Almost 10x the price! (But over 15x the speed).
1 points • etacarinae
What?
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B087N7HLRV/
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08957PT2K/
1 points • internetmaverick
I would suggest you buy the MSI GS66 Stealth. It's literally got the biggest battery you can legally carry onto a plane (99.9 Whr). You can spec it out to it's highest configuration and still have cash left over to maybe build a desktop for your homemade flight simulator. It's got amazing build quality (compared to it's predecessor) and it also looks really sleek to boot. Here's a link to the laptop:
https://www.amazon.com/MSI-GS66-Stealth-10SGS-036-300Hz/dp/B087CQG3ZP?th=1&psc=1
Should you want to increase the storage yourself, you can always install another nvme ssd in the additional nvme slot. Here's an example of a really wild ssd you could install:
https://www.amazon.com/Sabrent-Rocket-Internal-Performance-SB-RKTQ-8TB/dp/B08957PT2K/ref=mp_s_a_1_3?dchild=1&keywords=8tb+nvme+ssd&qid=1594841001&sr=8-3
That should bring up your grand total to approx. 4500 usd for a laptop which contains 9TB of high speed nvme ssd storage :)
Alternatively you may also consider the Eluktronics Mech G3 with a slightly smaller battery but a far easier method of configuring your laptop without having to open it up yourself (they build the laptop according to your needs and specifications and then send it to you). Find the link to their product configurator below:
https://www.eluktronics.com/MECH-15-G3
Cheers!
1 points • o_ohi
I'M WORKING ON IT ALL DAY EVERY DAY WORKING WITH TERABYTES OF DATA TAKES A LOT OF OPTIMIZATION.
Seriously I had to buy a $1500 8TB SSD to keep the database on one SSD. Working with data on this scale caused lots of work I've had to do, and optimization challenges.
You want anypdate? Here's your update. Shit tons of code. Like having to convert the data from JSON to its minimal representation in binary in the database, and back to integers, strings, floats when I work with it. That processing phase takes 12 hours per year of data leveraging all 16 cores on my i9 to go from .csv file to MongoDB. I'm going go eventually develop a GPU accelerated localized database that uses shared memory addresses to communicate with program, which I have to build from scratch because every database in the world is designed to make queries over the network, which even if it's a local network on your PC, going over the network card requires the data to be repackaged over 14 times up and down the OSI model. My database will be the fastest ever made (open-source) for local data processing. But I can get the thing running without that, it's just necessary for the shit ton of simulations that need to be done for machine learning to really bring RB to the next level. Anyway, that 12 hour data processing cycle? There's a bug in it. Debugging a process that takes that long is hard. That's what you're seeing on the screen in that video I linked, 2 months of data being processed.
1 points • cdoublejj
is this drive capable of advertised speeds once it gets over half full?
https://www.amazon.com/Sabrent-Rocket-Internal-Performance-SB-RKTQ-8TB/dp/B08957PT2K
also how crappy are these drives i just bought?
https://www.ebay.com/itm/Sandisk-CloudSpeed-Ultra-Gen-II-1-7TB-2TB-SATA-6Gb-s-2-5-SSD-MLC-dell-HP/224018569594?
Intel D3-S4610 3.8TB,Internal,2.5 inch (SSDSC2KG038T801)
https://www.ebay.com/itm/HGST-Ultrastar-SS200-HUSTR1576ASS200-7-6TB-SAS-2-5-SSD/143676818024?
1 points • pm_me_pcb_photos
https://www.msi.com/Laptop/GL65-Leopard-10SX/Specification
>1x M.2 SSD Combo slot (NVMe PCIe Gen3 / SATA)
1x 2.5" SATA HDD
>
>DDR4-2666
2 Slots
Max 64GB
So, you can buy a 1-5TB 2.5" HDD or SSD, but it usually comes with a 1TB HDD already installed.
And you can buy the biggest m.2 NVMe on the market, currently that is 8TB:
https://www.amazon.com/Sabrent-Rocket-Internal-Performance-SB-RKTQ-8TB/dp/B08957PT2K
But an 8TB NVMe SSD costs more than the laptop.
1 points • umeshufan
Does anyone know what max. capacity SSD the Thinkpad T14s AMD supports? I was personally hoping to get a 4 TByte SSD (8 TB M.2 2280 PCIe SSDs also exist); would that work?
The Tech Specs say "Up to 1TB PCIe SSD", but it's not clear if that's the maximum that's supported or only the maximum it can be bought with. The hardware maintenance manual (page 77) does not mention a capacity limit. Crucial has SEO'ed pages trying to sell me upgrades for particular laptops, and the one for the T14s lists a 2 TB SSD.
Any idea?
1 points • CleverGecko
>Yes, there are, you have no idea what you’re talking about clearly..
Now, then. What about the iMac which is shown in this post? A PC would be cheaper and more powerful.
- AMD Ryzen 3940X @ 16-Core - $689,99
- ASUS Radeon RX 5700 XT - $409,99
- Corsair Vengeance DDR4 3200MHz 64GB - $289,99
- Sabrent Rocket 8TB - $1,508,81
- NZXT H1 - $349,99
- Gigabyte B550I AORUS PRO AX - $206,54 (SUPPORTS ECC)
- Price: $3,455,31
- 27" iMac: $6,399
- Difference: $2,943,69 @ 46% cheaper
This PC takes less than 20 minutes to build, which is one of the most fantastic features of this case. There are hundreds of videos of the NZXT H1, not a single of them are longer than 20 minutes to build.
The processor is more powerful. The GPU has better cooling leading to better performance. The memory is 20% faster. The motherboard supports more useful ports. The PC supports 2x 2.5" drives. The PC is upgradable. The PC supports ECC memory. The PC is cheaper and more powerful.
Where was the comment you said, again?
>... you have no idea what you’re talking about ...
2 points • j-beda
I really like GrandPerspective for looking at what is taking up space on my storage.
http://grandperspectiv.sourceforge.net/
Restarting in Safe Mode, running "First Aid" in Disk Utility.app, and restarting in "regular" mode can sometimes clear up files and caches and do magic "TRIM" stuff that can free up available space.
macOS Safe Mode - https://support.apple.com/en-ca/HT201262
Restarting from the "Recovery Partition" does not delete all caches like Safe Mode does, but it can be useful for Disk Utility.app to have more ability to find and fix any storage issues:
macOS Recovery - https://support.apple.com/en-ca/HT201314
A 120GB drive is pretty small - you might look into replacing the internal drive with a larger one - they are not that expensive these days and there are adaptor cards for most older (non-USB-C) MacBook models to use generic SSD's or spend some more and get something from OWC - https://eshop.macsales.com/shop/ssd/owc
These are Canadian prices - USA ones are around 30% lower: $21 - M.2 NGFF Nvme SSD Adapter Card, PCIe SSD to M.2 M Key Adapter Card https://www.amazon.ca/dp/B07WMFTZ1Y?tag=johannsbookst-20 USA - https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01CWWAENG?tag=jbenterprises
Combined with the above adaptor card there are a few options on the storage front - I have used both Crucial and Sabrent.
$200 - Crucial P1 1TB 3D NAND NVMe PCIe M.2 SSD https://www.amazon.ca/dp/B07J2Q4SWZ?tag=johannsbookst-20 USA - https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07J2Q4SWZ?tag=jbenterprises
$170 - Sabrent Rocket Q 1TB NVMe PCIe M.2 2280 Internal SSD https://www.amazon.ca/dp/B07ZZYWTBP?tag=johannsbookst-20 USA - https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07ZZYWTBP?tag=jbenterprises
For a mere $2170 you can get a Sabrent 8TB module: https://www.amazon.ca/dp/B08957PT2K?tag=johannsbookst-20 USA - https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08957PT2K?tag=jbenterprises
Getting this type of inexpensive USB case for the new SSD would let you copy the old to the new (using SuperDuper! https://www.shirt-pocket.com/SuperDuper/ or other tools) before you do the physical swap:
$40 - USB Type C M.2 NVMe SSD Enclosure Adapter https://www.amazon.ca/dp/B07RZBTNTN?tag=johannsbookst-20 USA - https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07RZBTNTN?tag=jbenterprises
Alternatively, a physically tiny USB memory card can provide a place to offload your music/movies/photos to give you more space on your internal SSD while still carrying everything around with you all the time, can be a good idea.
$50 - SanDisk 256GB Ultra Fit USB 3.1 Flash Drive https://www.amazon.ca/dp/B07857Y17V?tag=johannsbookst-20 USA - https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07857Y17V?tag=jbenterprises
Instructions for doing the swap should be available at http://ifixit.com/