I want to upgrade some of my older machines with some new, high(er) capacity SSDs (SATA and nvme). I don’t need super high speeds, just something in the TB range in terms of storage.

Problem is, there’s so much garbage out there, I can’t really tell, which SSD is inexpensive and reliable and which is just utter garbage.

I thought about buying new, but last gen Samsung/WD SSDs.

Intenso and Fanxiang both seem to have been around for a few years, but reviews seem to be mixed.

2 points

pretty sure the sn570/550 used to be a pretty good deal

iirc they don’t sell it much anymore, maybe the sn580 is still a good deal?

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7 points
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Price to published write endurance might get you started, but I’m curious what answers you get because this is a difficult question IMHO. Actual reliability depends heavily on firmware which is a vendor-specific secret sauce.

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3 points

It’s absolutely opaque to me, especially the non-big-name brands barely get any reliable reviews and especially given the silicon lottery, I can’t tell if every chip is like the reviewed ones.

If I just happen to get the bad module that craps out after 6 months, the positive reviews are not that helpful.

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3 points

If I just happen to get the bad module that craps out after 6 months, the positive reviews are not that helpful.

That’s what RAID(5) is for, if a drive craps out you just shrug and get a new one (or warranty), no data loss. Easy enough to cobble together with a PCIe card and 4ish smaller drives, faster too…

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1 point

Well, except when a second drive dies 36 hours later and suddenly you are panicking…

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30 points

Just stick with known vendors, and find a good price. Make sure you have a solid warranty and backups, and you’ll be fine.

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6 points

If you live by a Micro Center, their house brand is pretty good.

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18 points

The closest one is about a trip over the Atlantic away.

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4 points

“honeyyyy, I figured out our vacation plans!”

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1 point

Seems reasonable. I know a guy with a fishing boat (that’s a joke, I live no where near the ocean)

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-20 points
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You mean “cheap or reliable”. And even with the better brands it’s always the question not if but when a device will fail.

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24 points

Honestly, that is the typical self-righteous stackoverflow response that is helping no one.

You know exactly what I mean, you know exactly how to treat the question, but you chose to play captain obvious of the second arrogance division and posted this.

Of course devices will fail at some point, what are you even trying to add here?

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7 points
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It’s exactly those kind of responses that makes me scared to ask questions when I need help in the Linux community…

It adds absolutely nothing to anything

Edit: I’ve got a WD Green and a Crucial NVMe drive in my current gaming rig and those have been solid

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-9 points

Don’t be scared. Just don’t fall for posts which try to get the impossible. It’s not that difficult.

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-8 points

I commented on the title of your post - nobody with some knowledge in that field (as you claim to have) would phrase that question that way.

Be offended, I can’t change that - but pointing out the obvious may help others to not make the mistake of hoping that there’s cheap good.

There isn’t.

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6 points

Oh, I’m terribly sorry that I didn’t use the exact wording that the semantic overlord required for his incantations.

Let’s recap, you only read the title, which by definition does not contain all the information, you wrote an extremely arrogant and absolutely not helpful comment, if challenged you answer with even more arrogance, and your only defense is nitpicky semantics, which even if taken at face value, do not change the value of your comment at all.

You are not helping anyone. No, not even others.

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2 points

By that logic, nothing is reliable…? Because you could say that about literally anything

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1 point

That’s in fact the point I was making, in this case about SSDs. Low prices don’t help with reliability as producers use the worse part of a production run for the cheaper brands (friend of mine works for a European based manufacturer of silicon chips, and he can tell stories about the finicky processes around that tiny stuff and how they try to make the most of it).

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