Mixed IO Performance

Our tests of mixed read/write IO vary the workload from pure reads to pure writes at 10% increments. Each mix is tested for up to 1 minute or 32GB of data transferred. The mixed random IO test uses a queue depth of 4 while the mixed sequential IO test uses a queue depth of 1. The tests are confined to a 64GB span of the drive, and the drive is given up to one minute of idle time in between each mix tested.

Mixed IO Performance
Mixed Random IO Mixed Sequential IO

The Samsung 870 QVO brings improved mixed sequential IO performance: a big boost to the 1TB model and a small increment for the 4TB. For mixed random IO, the 4TB model also gets a decent improvement, but the 1TB 870 QVO's performance is a clear regression. However, even with that regression the 870 QVO still performs far better on mixed random IO than the DRAMless SSDs.

Mixed IO Efficiency
Mixed Random IO Mixed Sequential IO

Power efficiency scores for the mixed random IO test generally follow the same pattern as the raw performance scores, but the DRAMless SSDs aren't as far behind the QLC and mainstream TLC drives. Over on the sequential IO side, most of the Samsung SATA drives had similar overall performance, but they still have fairly substantial power efficiency differences. The 870 QVO significantly improves power efficiency on the mixed sequential IO test compared to its predecessor, and has almost caught up to the TLC-based 860 EVO.

Mixed Random IO
Mixed Sequential IO

On the mixed random IO test, the 870 QVOs show clear improvement on the more read-heavy half of the test. As the workload continues to get more write-heavy, the 4TB 870 loses its lead over the 4TB 860, and the 1TB 870 hits a performance wall when it runs out of cache where the 1TB 860 QVO had no trouble.

During the mixed sequential IO test, the Samsung SATA drives all show broadly similar performance across the range of workloads, all bottoming out near a 30% read/70% write mix. The outlier was the 1TB 860 QVO which had substantially worse performance across most of the test, including a much lower worst-case performance. The 1TB 870 QVO shows drastic improvement over its predecessor.

 

Idle Power Measurement

SATA SSDs are tested with SATA link power management disabled to measure their active idle power draw, and with it enabled for the deeper idle power consumption score and the idle wake-up latency test. Our testbed, like any ordinary desktop system, cannot trigger the deepest DevSleep idle state.

Idle Power Consumption - No PMIdle Power Consumption - Desktop

The big obvious difference in the power measurements here between the 870 QVO and its predecessor is for the 4TB model. When we tested the 4TB 860 QVO, SATA link power management did work, but the drive itself never went to sleep because it was busy with background garbage collection work the entire time our testbed was trying to measure its idle power. The 4TB 870 QVO finished its cleanup work in the time allotted by this test and was truly idle during the measurements.

Idle Wake-Up Latency

Idle wake-up performance is unsurprisingly quite similar for the various Samsung SATA SSDs, and the Crucial MX500 also takes about a millisecond to wake up from sleep. The two DRAMless SSDs show how budget drives often have broken power management, either by not sleeping at all (leading to near-instant wake-up), or by taking a bit long to wake up despite the sleep state still drawing quite a bit of power. And then there's the NVMe SSD which has a remarkably long wake-up time from this particular sleep state, but it was also drawing less power than the SATA drives in the slumber state.

Synthetic Benchmarks Conclusion
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  • Oxford Guy - Tuesday, June 30, 2020 - link

    QLC is a bad product at a bad price.
  • scineram - Friday, July 3, 2020 - link

    Narrator: "There are bad products"
  • Operandi - Tuesday, June 30, 2020 - link

    I think Samsung is just cashing in a bit on their name and reputation they built up over the years when even the a lot of the bigger names in memory and storage had drives with questionable reliability and performance.

    Having said that the 4TB and 8TB drives are fine since nobody else can really play in that space. Maybe Samsung shoudn't even bother with sub 4TB for the QVO series. It would certainly look better from a market perspective.
  • Oxford Guy - Tuesday, June 30, 2020 - link

    Samsung's reliability hasn't been so legendary. There was the regular 840 drive that was so bad in the 128 GB capacity that even without steady state it was like laptop hard drive slow. Then there was the 840 EVO that needed a kludge work-around to "solve" the problem of random data loss.
  • Daro - Tuesday, June 30, 2020 - link

    All my SSDs that died were Samsung: 3 840 evos, and 2 850 evos. I ll ve never buy another samsung SSD in my life.
  • leexgx - Wednesday, July 1, 2020 - link

    It's really random luck on failure of an SSD (only had 1 samsung evo witch I might of destroyed
    system was ignored for over 30 days powered up, when I got to it the system was up at desktop,but nothing would open so hard to force power cycle it had smart fail no boot, I think something was writing constantly to the ssd or power issue,, other 3 ssds was cheap SanDisk plus (I think) after 6-12 months they started missing data on reads
  • voicequal - Thursday, July 2, 2020 - link

    I've never personally lost data on a Samsung SSD, which can't be said for others. 840 EVOs were a stretch, pushing TLC planar NAND to its limits, but 850 EVOs cleared that up with V-NAND. Now we're back to QLC pushing the limits again.
  • khanikun - Monday, July 6, 2020 - link

    Reason I stopped buying Samsung. Everything I've bought from them has broken in some way. Not broken enough that they don't work, but broken enough that they were annoying. Monitors, the power button would semi-function. I'd be slapping the button with my finger to get it to turn on/off. Be doing that like 10 times until it'd eventually go.

    Only had one SSD from Samsung. Got it for free with my monitor. Some Newegg deal. It started getting bad sectors in a year. Samsung TV, the remote stopped working. Samsung bluray player, simply broke. I just avoid them now.
  • eek2121 - Tuesday, June 30, 2020 - link

    The prices are...underwhelming to say the least. While this may be cheaper than other Samsung drives, Samsung does not exist in a void. There are other TLC and even MLC drives that can be had cheaper. Anything above $100/tb is too much IMO, unless there is a compelling reason (such as performance) to justify the premium.
  • eek2121 - Tuesday, June 30, 2020 - link

    The Crucial MX500, BX500, Sandisk SSD Plus, and many other SSDs are available on Amazon right now for $199.99 for a 2TB offering.

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