Plextor has introduced its new family of entry-level SSDs, which could become the most affordable drives in the company’s lineup in the coming months. The S2C SSDs use TLC NAND flash memory made by SK Hynix using 16 nm process technology as well as a controller from Silicon Motion.

Plextor has its own history with TLC NAND-based as well as SMI-powered SSDs and the S2C family is the first time, when the manufacturer combined the inexpensive memory and an affordable controller. The company originally planned to release its first SSD featuring TLC memory in mid-2015 and even demonstrated a drive featuring Marvell's 88SS1074 controller as well as Toshiba’s TLC NAND at CES 2015. After months of evaluating the configuration, Plextor decided to proceed with Toshiba’s MLC memory and Silicon Motion’s SM2246EN controller for its M6V SSD. In April 2016, the company finally released the M7V, its first drive based on TLC NAND memory produced by Toshiba using its 15 nm process technology. The Plextor S2C is the second TLC-based SSD by the company, which targets the low-end of the market.

The S2C features Silicon Motion’s SM2258 controller (which has four NAND flash channels and supports LDPC ECC technology) as well as SK Hynix’s TLC NAND made using planar 16 nm process tech, a combination found in Intel’s 540s SSDs. SMI’s SM2258 controller is a relatively new IC, which is why some SSD makers plan to use it for 3D NAND-based drives (e.g., ADATA’s SU800) because of compatibility with the memory as well as presumable low cost. Being cautious and due to slow ramp of SK Hynix’s 3D NAND, Plextor decided to use the SM2258 controller with planar TLC NAND from the South Korean company.

Plextor S2C, M7V and M6V SSD Specifications
  S2C M7V M6V
128GB 256GB 512GB 128GB 256GB 512GB 128GB 256GB 512GB
Controller Silicon Motion SM2258 Marvell 88SS1074B1 Silicon Motion SM2246EN
NAND SK Hynix 15 nm TLC Toshiba 15 nm TLC Toshiba 15nm MLC
DRAM Cache 128MB 256MB 512MB 256MB 512MB 1 GB 128MB 256MB 512MB
Sequential Read 520 MB/s 560 MB/s 535 MB/s
Sequential Write 440
MB/s
480 MB/s 500 MB/s 530 MB/s 170 MB/s 335 MB/s 455 MB/s
4kB Random Read 80K
IOPS
98K
IOPS
97K IOPS 98K
IOPS
81K IOPS 83K
IOPS
4kB Random Write 48K IOPS 72K
IOPS
78K
IOPS
51K IOPS 84K
IOPS
42K IOPS 80K
IOPS
Warranty 3 years

Plextor’s S2C drives come in 2.5”/7mm form-factor with SATA interface and are available in 128 GB (PX-128S2C), 256 GB (PX-256S2C) and 512 GB (PX-512S2C) configurations. Plextor is specing the highest-capacity S2C at up to 520 MB/s for sequential reads and up to 480 MB/s for sequential writes, but more affordable models sport slightly lower write speeds. As for random performance, we are dealing with drives capable of 98,000/78,000K read/write IOPS. Unlike many low-cost SSDs today, the S2C features DRAM cache to guarantee decent performance of write operations. In addition, Plextor promises that its S2C drives will sustain their performance over prolonged periods.

The Plextor S2C will be joining in a pretty crowded party ot entry-level SSDs. The drives will naturally compete against Plextor’s own M6V, M7V and M6S Plus. In addition, they will have to rival Intel’s 540s drives, which are not only very affordable, but also come with a five-year warranty (Plextor only offers a three-year warranty with its S2C).

Plextor has not announced MSRPs for its S2C drives and right now the products are absent from large U.S.-based retailers. Given performance numbers declared by the manufacturer, the S2C should be cheaper than the other entry-level drives sold under this brand.

Source: Plextor

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  • trparky - Friday, October 7, 2016 - link

    Why the hell are they still making 16nm TLC NAND Flash based SSDs? Haven't we learned that as NAND Flash shrinks past 19nm it becomes too unreliable which results in reduced performance over time due to voltage drive?
  • trparky - Friday, October 7, 2016 - link

    voltage drift*
  • hojnikb - Friday, October 7, 2016 - link

    because they are cheap.
  • BrokenCrayons - Friday, October 7, 2016 - link

    And they sell VERY well to consumers.
  • emn13 - Friday, October 7, 2016 - link

    Depending on how you measure, such drives still provide the best cost/benefit tradeoff. If you're not doing something unusual, then there's only so much I/O you're going to do. If you can meet those needs in 1ms or 10ms - well, the difference is not likely to be perceptible, so you're better off picking whatever is cheapest.

    Of course, if you needs have workloads that are (say) 100 times longer, and the choice is between 100ms latency and 1s, then perhaps it's worth talking about! But at light I/O load, a samsung 960 pro may well not feel any faster than this drive, even though it's much more expensive (and quantifiably faster).
  • Samus - Saturday, October 8, 2016 - link

    Said it before and I'll say it again because it still stands true.

    TLC drives aren't any cheaper than MLC drives. There is no reason to get something inferior when something superior is the same price.

    Sandisk SSD Plus is MLC and stupid cheap. Various drives based on the Sandforce SF2281, an incredibly mature controller at this point can still be found on par or CHEAPER than TLC drives. And even though its a 4 year old controller, it's still going to be faster in most applications than any planar TLC drive that relies on SLC caching.

    And of course, there are used or refurbished drives. I'd take many of these over a new TLC drive. Crucial M550's are dirt cheap on eBay and they are faster and more reliable than any TLC drive.
  • hojnikb - Saturday, October 8, 2016 - link

    SSD plus is TLC for quite some time now. And other drives also silently switched to TLC.
  • Samus - Sunday, October 9, 2016 - link

    What the fuck is wrong with them. They rebadged the Z410 as an SSD Plus at the beginning of the year, completely changing the drive?

    Drives can't just silently switch to TLC. Most drives are recognized by their controllers and performance, both of which change when transitioning NAND architecture.

    Well fuck Sandisk they just pulled a scam out of OCZ old dusty, bankrupt playbook.

    People just get an MLC drive on eBay then until this sub 20nm Planar TLC thing actually proves itself.
  • hojnikb - Monday, October 10, 2016 - link

    Technically, it's not the same drive, because they changed the model number. SSD plus with tlc now ends with -G26, instead of G25 for the mlc model.
  • Samus - Monday, November 13, 2017 - link

    Well they certainly didn't go out of their way to make it obvious the changes under the hood are pretty substantial, changing the sub model by 1 digit.

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