Testseek.com have collected 50 expert reviews of the Sabrent M.2 2280 Rocket Q Series NVMe PCIe and the average rating is 84%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Sabrent M.2 2280 Rocket Q Series NVMe PCIe.
June 2020
(84%)
50 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
The Sabrent Rocket Q appears to be a decent low-cost NVMe SSD that uses QLC NAND Flash memory. We've been watching this drive closely since it came to market in November 2019 as the 1TB model entered the market at just $99.99. It looked set to disrupt the...
Huge capacity in a tiny form factor, Fast and durable, Supports ONFi 2.3 to 4.0 along with the usual features and wear levelling, Includes Acronis True Image cloning software
Price,
At the time of this review, Sabrent's Rocket Q with 4TB capacity can be yours for £623.81 and $749.99. While that sounds like a lot, it is because it is. It is a 50% premium over the 1TB price. That said, it's totally worth the asking price. Not only is i...
Published: 2020-08-24, Author: Andrew , review by: techteamgb.co.uk
Abstract: If you want a single SSD to be all the storage you'll ever need, nothing seems like a better option than this Sabrent Rocket Q. I have the 4TB one, but you can get 8TB if you'd rather, and it's damn impressive. It's got some flaws, but on the whole a very...
Highest-capacity M.2 SSD available, Competitive performance and efficiency, Software support, Aesthetics, Up to five-year warranty,
Expensive, One-year warranty w/out registration, Slow write speed after write cache fills, Low endurance-per-GB compared to TLC, May throttle without cooling
Weighing in as the industry's highest-capacity M.2 NVMe SSD, Sabrent's 8TB Rocket Q is a pint-sized monster best suited for the data hoarder on the go...
Tiny form factor, No overheating afer long transfer sessions, Incredible speed
Not being the first product of Sabrent I'm testing, I was under the impression that it would be quite fast and indeed, fast it is! The advertised speeds are not only for the first X gigabytes, they are reached for as long as a file is being transferred an...
Abstract: Solid-state drives (SSDs) have come a long way in recent years: a long way up in speed and capacity, and a long way down in price. Technology that was previously reserved for enterprise customers and the PC performance elite has gained the common touch, w...
Pros, Rocket Q line includes rare 8TB option, Fast 4K read and write scores in Crystal DiskMark, Five-year warranty
Cons, 8TB and 4TB models have high costs per gigabyte, Low write-durability ratings at each capacity versus Samsung's QLC-based QVO SATA SSDs
Bottom LineIf you need the maximum single-drive capacity for a PCI Express NVMe M.2 drive, Sabrent's Rocket Q 8TB is a solid option, but we'd keep an eye on Samsung's coming SATA-drive QLC moves, too...
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(70%)
Published: 2021-01-31, Author: Andreas , review by: pcmasters.de
Sabrent Rocket Q ab 109€Die Rocket Q NVMe SSD hat sich erstaunlich gut geschlagen. Die Solid State Modul zielt auf das Mainstream-Segment ab und reiht sich in den Benchmarks hinter der 970 EVO von Samsung und der Rocket 4.0 ein. Damit ist sie keineswegs l...