• Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • DCMA
  • Sitemap
  • Submit
Regional Posts
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Sports
    • Politics
  • Business
    • Crypto
    • Marketing
  • Lifestyle
    • Entertainment
    • Fashion
    • Food
  • Tech
    • Gaming
    • Gadgets
  • Science
  • Health
  • Travel
  • World
Regional Posts
  • News
    • Sports
    • Politics
  • Business
    • Crypto
    • Marketing
  • Lifestyle
    • Entertainment
    • Fashion
    • Food
  • Tech
    • Gaming
    • Gadgets
  • Science
  • Health
  • Travel
  • World
No Result
View All Result
Regional Posts
No Result
View All Result
Home Gadgets

Kingston KC3000 PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSD (2TB) Review: A New Breed of Speed

by Editor
November 19, 2022
in Gadgets
0
kingston kc3000 rear ndtv Kingston
562
SHARES
3.7k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

How fast do you need your SSD to be? Is there a point beyond which speed won’t matter, and should you really be chasing every last drop of performance? In a short time, we’ve jumped from spinning hard drives to SATA SSDs to the NVMe protocol, and each of these standards has reached a saturation point, beyond which any drive will be bottlenecked. Now, a relatively new breed of SSDs is doubling the potential speed of NVMe thanks to the PCIe 4.0 standard. This has opened up a whole new category in the SSD market, and most brands already have products out that can take advantage of it – if you have compatible hardware, that is.

In stark contrast to its other entry-level offerings, Kingston’s new KC3000 SSD is aiming to deliver the absolute highest speeds possible for data transfers. If you regularly load huge game textures, or work with giant video files or 3D models, this might just be the right SSD for you. Of course, this kind of performance comes at a price. Thanks to Intel’s latest 12th Gen desktop platform, I was able to review the Kingston KC3000 to its full potential. Read on to see just how much of a difference it could make to your life.

READ ALSO

Best STEM gadgets and gift ideas for the budding engineers in your life » Gadget Flow

iPhone 14 Pro Review: Islands in the Screen

Kingston KC3000 PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSD price in India

Kingston has only recently started selling the KC3000 SSD in India following its global launch last year, and it comes in four capacity options. Street prices do fluctuate, and these figures are accurate at the time of publishing. As explained below, performance varies between capacity options.

The lowest capacity you can get is 512GB, which tells you something about the KC3000’s target audience. This version is priced at Rs. 9,400 in India. The 1TB version will cost Rs. 15,200, while the 2TB version that I have for review is selling for Rs. 33,900 online. There’s also a flagship 4TB version, but it’s priced at a rather unreasonable Rs. 86,800 which is well over double the money. 4TB NVMe SSDs in the M.2 form factor are rare, and it’s unlikely that prices will go down for such a niche offering anytime soon.

This SSD will compete with the likes of the WD Black SN850, Seagate Firecuda 530, and Samsung SSD 980 Pro. Prices are competitive by that standard, but still around twice as much as what you’d pay for a mainstream PCIe 3.0 NVMe SSD such as the WD Blue SN570, which I also reviewed recently.

 

There’s a heat spreader on the top, and regulatory information is printed on the bottom

Kingston KC3000 PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSD specifications and features

The main appeal of a PCIe 4.0 SSD is speed, and Kingston promises sequential reads and writes of 7000MBps – about twice as fast as today’s best performing PCIe 3.0 NVMe SSDs. However, these speeds apply only to the 2TB and 4TB variants; the rated sequential read speed remains constant but sequential write targets drop to 6000MBps for the 1TB version and just 3900MBps for the 512GB version. The M.2 slot standard is unchanged gen-on-gen so you can use this SSD with older motherboards; it will simply function at the lower PCIe standard’s performance level.

Kingston has chosen the fairly new Phison PS5018-E18 controller and Micron’s 176-layer TLC NAND flash for the KC3000. High-end SSDs have their own DRAM for caching, and that capacity ranges from 512MB on the 512GB variant to 4GB on the 4TB variant. Kingston also lists SLC caching on the spec sheet. This means that only one bit is written to each cell of the TLC NAND rather than the usual three bits per cell, to speed up operations when possible, after which the data is consolidated. There’s no mention of hardware encryption.

Endurance is rated between 400TBW (Terabytes written) for the 512GB version and 3.2PBW (Petabytes written) at 4TB, which scales proportionately to capacity. That works out to between 219GB and 876GB of writes per day for these capacities during the five-year warranty period.

The Kingston KC3000 comes in a clear plastic bubble pack mounted on a simple sheet of cardboard. There’s very little protection, which is surprising for such a premium SSD. The 512GB and 1TB versions are single-sided while the 2TB and 4TB versions have chips on both sides of the M.2 module. The fairly stylish label (unlike the ones on previous models) is printed on a very thin graphene-aluminium strip, which serves as a heat spreader. It won’t interfere with the heatsinks that many of today’s high-end desktop motherboards have, but you should keep these factors in mind if you want to upgrade a slim laptop.

It’s worth noting that the Kingston KC3000 is also physically and technically compatible with the Sony PlayStation 5 (and you can add an adhesive heatsink if needed). If you’re looking for an internal storage capacity upgrade, this is an option. Even on Windows PCs, the emerging DirectStorage API allows data such as compressed game assets to be pulled directly from an SSD to a graphics card’s memory. This bypasses the CPU and allows for more efficient decompression, allowing games load quicker. This is an example of how PCIe 4.0 bandwidth can come into play.

You can download Kingston’s free SSD Manager tool, which includes diagnostics and a secure erase feature, as well as a copy of Acronis True Image HD if you want to clone your previous drive or take backups. Kingston’s software looks crude compared to what we’ve seen from WD and Samsung. As usual, the packaging doesn’t make it obvious to buyers that this software is even available.

kingston kc3000 side ndtv Kingston

The 2TB and 4TB versions have components on both sides, making them about 1.3mm thicker

Kingston KC3000 PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSD performance

Such a premium SSD deserves today’s top-end components, and I was able to use Intel’s latest 12th Gen ‘Alder Lake’ platform to harness the full potential of PCIe 4.0. The test bench consisted of an Intel Core i9-12900K CPU, Asus TUF Gaming Z690-Plus WiFi D4 motherboard, 2x16GB of Corsair Dominator Platinum RGB DDR4-3600 RAM, a Sapphire Nitro+ Radeon RX 590 graphics card, a Corsair RM850 power supply, an Asus Strix LC II 360 AIO cooler, and an Asus PB287Q 4K monitor. Tests were run under Windows 11, and it reported a formatted capacity of 1.86TB for the 2TB KC3000.

Keeping in mind that Kingston sent me the 2TB version for review, which has higher performance ratings than its lower-capcity siblings, let’s check the test scores. CrystalDiskMark reported sequential reads and writes at a phenomenal 7091.3MBps and 6773.3 MBps. For the sake of comparison, the recently launched WD Blue SN570, which is a great choice for value-conscious buyers, managed 3495.3MBps and 2997.3MBps respectively. Random reads came in at 2,745MBps and random write speed was 1170.1MBps.

The Anvil storage benchmark reported read and write scores of 9,132.52 and 11,565.5 respectively, for a total of 20,698.02. These numbers mean that the Kingston KC3000 uses the doubled bandwidth of PCIe 4.0 effectively to produce scores around twice as high as those of even the best PCIe 3.0 NVMe SSDs we’ve tested so far.

kingston kc3000 hardware ndtv Kingston

The Kingston KC3000 comes in a surprisingly simple cardboard pack. Seen here with compatible top-end hardware.

Verdict

PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSDs are far more expensive than their PCIe 3.0 counterparts, but the reason is abundantly clear – performance is in a whole new league. The Kingston KC3000 is aimed at those who are building new high-end PCs and want cutting-edge performance. Gamers might enjoy quicker loads between levels, and creative pros might find like loading and saving their work with a little less waiting around. If you’re spending huge amounts of money for the latest CPU and motherboard, you’ll want an SSD of this calibre to truly harness their power. However, this is beyond the point of diminishing returns for average users. Most people will be perfectly fine with the performance a PCIe 3.0 SSD affords, and it wasn’t too long ago that even SATA SSDs were a luxury.

You will of course need a fairly recent AMD or Intel processor and a matching motherboard (or a PlayStation 5) to take advantage of PCIe 4.0 so there isn’t much sense in buying such an SSD to upgrade an older PC with. If money is no object, then by all means, go for the best. The Kingston KC3000 is the fastest SSD we’ve tested yet, but you should also consider competitors from WD and Samsung, and see how their prices compare at the time you make your purchase decision.

Kingston KC3000
Prices (MOP):

512GB: Rs. 9,400
1TB: Rs. 15,200
2TB: Rs. 33,900
4TB: Rs. 86,800

Pros

  • Extremely high performance
  • Five-year warranty
  • Low-profile heat spreader

Cons

  • No hardware encryption
  • Software could use improvement

Ratings (Out of 5)

  • Performance: 5
  • Value for Money: 4
  • Overall: 4.5

Source by gadgets360.com

Share225Tweet141
Previous Post

Best Widgets & Plugins for Websites

Next Post

Destiny 2 Brutiks Lightbane boss guide

Related Posts

iRobot Create 3
Gadgets

Best STEM gadgets and gift ideas for the budding engineers in your life » Gadget Flow

November 20, 2022
iPhone 14 pro purple rear ndtv iphone 14
Gadgets

iPhone 14 Pro Review: Islands in the Screen

November 20, 2022
Flipkart Big Diwali Sale Goes Live for Plus Members: Best Offers on Mobile Phones, Electronics
Gadgets

Flipkart Big Diwali Sale Goes Live for Plus Members: Best Offers on Mobile Phones, Electronics

November 20, 2022
Anker Sleep A10 earbuds
Gadgets

Anker’s Soundcore Liberty 4 earbuds can monitor your heart rate

November 20, 2022
Netgear Nighthawk AXE3000 wireless adapter
Gadgets

Netgear Nighthawk AXE3000 wireless adapter

November 20, 2022
Emirates Resumes Flights to London Stansted
Gadgets

The Best Gifts Under $500 for 2022

November 20, 2022

POPULAR NEWS

Capitol Police Release New Video of Officer Lila Morris Beating Already Unconscious Rosanne Boyland with Stick on Jan. 6 -- But Video Is Super Pixilated to Protect Morris

Capitol Police Release New Video of Officer Lila Morris Beating Already Unconscious Rosanne Boyland with Stick on Jan. 6 — But Video Is Super Pixilated to Protect Morris

November 19, 2022
Euphoria Season 2: Maddy and Cassie's New Year's Eve Outfits

Euphoria Season 2: Maddy and Cassie’s New Year’s Eve Outfits

November 19, 2022
See Photos of Type O Negative's Peter Steele Through the Years

See Photos of Type O Negative’s Peter Steele Through the Years

November 19, 2022
Helena Citron was a prisoner at Auschwitz, the notorious concentration camp in Poland, when she was romanced by Nazi officer Franz Wunsch.

Movie reveals affair between Auschwitz prisoner, Nazi captor

November 20, 2022
Last Night in Soho's Costume Designer On the Movie's Fashion

Last Night in Soho’s Costume Designer On the Movie’s Fashion

November 19, 2022

EDITOR'S PICK

Close up of a Nomos Glashutte watch

Are Nomos Glashutte Watches Good? History, Review, & More

November 19, 2022
Video: Father Forcibly Thrown Out Of School Board Meeting For Not Wearing Mask - Board Members Were Caught Doing The Same Days Earlier

Video: Father Forcibly Thrown Out Of School Board Meeting For Not Wearing Mask – Board Members Were Caught Doing The Same Days Earlier

November 19, 2022
Grohl, NIN + James Gang's 'Last Ride' Lead 2022 VetsAid Benefit

Grohl, NIN + James Gang’s ‘Last Ride’ Lead 2022 VetsAid Benefit

November 20, 2022
Neeraj Chopra - Net Worth 2022

Neeraj Chopra – Net Worth 2022

November 19, 2022

About

REGIONAL POSTS Web Magazine is an online magazine covering international news, politics, technology, health, education, and much more.Read More.

Follow Us

Submit a News | Write For Us

Feel free to contact us for submission queries. via contact form or email us at : [email protected]

  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • DCMA
  • Sitemap
  • Submit

© 2021 Regionalposts.com

No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Sports
    • Politics
  • Business
    • Crypto
    • Marketing
  • Lifestyle
    • Entertainment
    • Fashion
    • Food
  • Tech
    • Gaming
    • Gadgets
  • Science
  • Health
  • Travel
  • World

© 2021 Regionalposts.com