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SanDisk 256GB X300 Enterprise SSD $135 + Bonus $50 eBay Voucher @ Shopping Square eBay

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An Enterprise server grade SSD provide more stable and secure data storage.
Check here for the benefit of X300 compared with standard SSD

With the eBay Click & Collect Option. you can get up to $100 eBay Voucher with it.
Original Spend $100 Get $50 Voucher/Spend $200 Get $100 Voucher deal Excludes WA/SA

SanDisk 256GB X300 Enterprise SSD $134.95
Buy 1 to get $50 Voucher, Buy 2 to get $100 Voucher

SanDisk 128GB X300 Enterprise SSD $79.95
Buy 2 to get $50 Voucher, Buy 3 to get $100 Voucher

Specifications
Capacity 256GB
Sequential Read/Write Up to 530/470MB/s
Random Read/Write Up to 96/80k
Form Factor 2.5" 7mm cased, m.2 2280, mSATA
Interface SATA Revision 3.2 (6 Gb/s) backward compatible to SATA Revision 2.0 (3 Gb/s) and SATA Revision 1.0 (1.5 Gb/s)
Endurance >80 TBW

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closed Comments

  • +1

    Enterprise SSD using TLC? :(

  • +1

    The article basically states the X300 is worse performance than Ultra II, and the main reason for getting it is businesses that don't want drives with different firmware/capacitors etc.
    Is this correct?

    • +1

      That's what it sounded like to me. Didn't seem like a great article to advocate for the X300. Plus 1 for the lack of bias.

    • +1

      It should be same class as Samsung PM835T SSD and Intel SSD Pro, correct me if I'm wrong.

      Enterprise SSD is targeting error free and reliable data storage, instead of speed performance only.

      • +1

        That is true for Enterprise (Server) SSD. This is not a server SSD, it is a client SSD, designed for desktop PCs in enterprises that all need to be the same and require 6 months notification before changes are made to a product.
        Reading that review it actually says the max write cycles are worse than the Ultra II, so it will more likely die sooner.

        • Thanks. I was wondering how server grade SSD could be so cheap.

      • SanDisk's Leo Huang said: "The two products are similar but cater to two separate markets, Ultra II for Retail and X300 for Commercial Business. The main difference is the value X300 brings to customers that are designing in, and also IT [which requires] a notification for any changes that occur during the life cycle of the product. Examples would be different DRAM, FW (firmware), capacitors, housing [which] would require SanDisk to notify them 60 days prior … For Ultra II, which is a consumer drive, we may change NAND, FW, capacitors and housing at any given time so long as it meets the specifications we have published."

        • Usually this would be called "industrial" spec, not "enterprise". Sandisk themselves even used to make industrial versions of their SD cards. I guess "enterprise" would make people think they were server grade more-so than industrial. Misleading at best.

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