![]() If you are doing heavy data crunching or need a fast read/ write drive for video editing, the ioDrive 2 is still fairly good. For read optimized workloads, an Intel 750 or P3600 may be a better option. The performance of these drives fall off much less under heavy writes than the Intel DC P3600's. You can simply register on the WD/ SanDisk/ Fusion-io site to get access to the downloads. As a result, unlike NVMe drives, you will have to install the driver. One item to be careful about with these drives is that they are not boot drives and they do not have default drivers in Windows/ Linux. Installation of the HP/ HPE card worked in Windows 10 Pro without issue by simply installing the driver packs from the WD/ SanDisk/ Fusion-io support site. It is also pushing almost it entire 1.5GB/s rating while doing a 4K IOPS test at QD 64 (much lower than most NVMe drives can peak.) ![]() That figure is higher than the 2013 rated specs.įor those wondering why that is an impressive screenshot: it shows one of these cards running over its rated IOPS. Interface: PCIe 2.0 x8 (works in older servers)Īctual 4K Random Read IOPS using a Windows 10 Pro test machine were over 330K. Random 4k read IOPS (tested via Iometer): 330K - 340K Hopefully others can chime in with experiences. ![]() Starting a thread on the Fusion-io ioDrive 2 1.2TB cards as they seem to be on the market fairly often now at under $0.50/GB. ![]()
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