Team Group T-Force XTREEM ARGB DDR4 review #GURU3D CRYSTAL DISKMARK PORTABLE#We take a look at the Team Group T-FORCE M200 Portable SSD, which is available in capacities up to 8TB! This portable storage USB3 SSD is capable of achieving sweet read and write rates (2GB/sec). Team Group T-FORCE M200 2TB Portable USB3 SSD review However, I would venture that if said real world performance difference really matters to you, you probabaly have enough money in your pocket to be looking at top of the line SATA drives, like the 860 Evo, or even NVMe M.2 SSDs like Crucial's P1, Samsung's 970 Evo, or Western Digital's new 'Black' series. Again, it's difficult to get a read on what exactly the real world performance difference is going to be. This isn't a shocker, at all, as Samsung's new NAND and in-house controller were always going to be very strong performers. Granted, it loses out heavily in some of the random tests, whilst keeping the gap much closer during others, as well as very tight when things get sequential. Some of you might be wondering how the current drive matches up to Samsung's latest QVO SSD? Well, it actually does remarkably well. On adding some randomness to the mix, performance suffered, but this is as expected. We saw 561 MB/s on the sequential read test, and just under the fully advertised 520MB/s of sequential write. The CDM suite of tests is, it must be said, especially kind to the Seagate drive. The old version of the software was quite different, but produced very consistent results, hence why it is a favorite. The test focuses on random read/write performance at a wider variety of pre-determined queue/thread depths. It's a test which often makes drives look very good, hence its widespread use.
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