PCIe Gen 5 SSDs are now widely available. There are numerous examples of speedy Gen 5 x4 drives including Teamgroup Z540 And Nextorage X Series. But one of the names missing the Gen 5 x4 wave is Samsung. We're yet to see a true replacement for the Samsung 990 Pro. Or have we?
The answer to that is a big no, even though listings for a so-called Samsung 1080 Pro has shown up at AliExpress. Sadly, this is not some pre-release early listing, these drives are total fakes. The first red flags are the ridiculously low prices. AU$48.73 (under $29 USD) for a high performance 4TB SSD should be enough to prevent anyone from falling for this scam.
The listed performance capabilities of the drive are all over the place. In one of the pictures of the drive, a text overlay shows sequential read and write speeds of up to 15,800 MB/s and 14,500MB/s respectively. That's quite impossible for a drive marked as Gen 4 SSD. Probably just a typo, right? The 'official' spec shows a read speed of up to 14,000 MB/s while another so called spec for the 4TB drive shows 7,450 MB/s and 6,950 MB/s read and write speeds.
Looks like a pretty low quality scam. Then again, some of the customer reviews all-but convinced me. One AliExpress customer review says: 'I will give it five stars', while another says 'After installation, it fits 100% and I believe it is original. I am very satisfied with its use'.
Shut up and take my money!
Best SSD for gaming: The best speedy storage today.
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Despite being an obvious scam, the Korean tech site Quasarzone (via El Chapuzas Informatico) bought one anyway, and for giggles gave it the full benchmark treatment. Surprisingly the drive was actually functional. The drive included a single 96-layer NAND chip (impossible for a 4TB drive), a Realtek controller and support for PCIe Gen 3.
The results show the '1080 Pro' is absolute garbage as
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