Silicon Power UD70 M.2 SSD Review: Low-Cost PCIe Gen3 Speed

Source: Tom's Hardware added 05th Mar 2021

  • silicon-power-ud70-m.2-ssd-review:-low-cost-pcie-gen3-speed

Our Verdict

While not the best looking M.2 NVMe SSD we’ve come across, Silicon Power’s UD70 is a responsive PCIe 3.0 SSD with an attractive price point.

For

  • Competitive performance
  • Single-sided form factor
  • AES 256-bit hardware encryption
  • 5-year warranty

Against

  • Low endurance ratings
  • Slow write speed after write cache fills

Features and Specifications

Silicon Power’s UD70 oozes value and is a perfect option for tight-budgeted gamers and ordinary everyday office users. The UD70 comes with a potent combination of Phison’s E12S PCIe 3.0 NVMe SSD controller and Micron’s latest QLC flash, making it quite similar to the Sabrent Rocket Q we reviewed last year. 

The UD70 delivers solid performance for a PCIe 3.0 SSD, has an inexpensive price tag, and comes with hardware encryption support. But due to its rather weak sustained write performance, it’s not too appealing to the prosumer crowd.

Specifications

Product UD70 500GB UD70 1TB UD70 2TB
Pricing $76.50 $109.99 $195.99
Capacity (User / Raw) 500GB / 512GB 1000GB / 1024GB 2000GB / 2048GB
Form Factor M.2 2280 M.2 2280 M.2 2280
Interface / Protocol PCIe 3.0 x4 / NVMe 1.3 PCIe 3.0 x4 / NVMe 1.3 PCIe 3.0 x4 / NVMe 1.3
Controller Phison PS5012-E12S Phison E12S Phison E12S
DRAM DDR3L DDR3L DDR3L
Memory Micron 96L QLC Micron 96L QLC Micron 96L QLC
Sequential Read 3,400 MBps 3,400 MBps 3,400 MBps
Sequential Write 1,000 MBps 1,900 MBps 3,000 MBps
Read 95,000 IOPS 120,000 IOPS 250,000 IOPS
Write 250,000 IOPS 500,000 IOPS 650,000 IOPS
Security AES 256-bit encryption  AES 256-bit encryption  AES 256-bit encryption 
Endurance (TBW) 120 TB 260 TB 530 TB
Part Number SP500GBP34UD7005 SP01KGBP34UD7005 SP02KGBP34UD7005
Warranty 5-Years 5-Years 5-Years

Silicon Power’s UD70 comes in capacities of 500GB, 1TB, and 2TB and is priced as low as $0.10 per GB. The 2TB model is rated for peak speeds of up to 3.4/3 GBps of sequential read/write throughput, while the 500GB and 1TB models write a little slower at up to 1.0 GBps and 1.9 GBps, respectively. The entire series is rated for up to 250,000/650,000 random read/write IOPS. 

These peak performance ratings are measured within the SLC cache, though. The UD70 features a large dynamic SLC cache that spans one-quarter of its capacity, but the cache will shrink as you fill the drive, or grow as you free up space. As such, because the SSD comes armed with QLC flash, that sustained performance won’t last long after you begin filling the SSD with data. 

The UD70 comes backed by a five-year warranty and supports standard data integrity mechanisms like end-to-end data protection, LDPC ECC, and RAID-like parity protection. These mechanisms help enable reasonable endurance ratings for a low-end device with QLC flash — our 2TB sample can absorb up to 530TB of writes within its warranty period. The drive also comes with optional support for hardware-accelerated AES 256-bit encryption, enabling responsive and secure data storage.

Software and Accessories

Silicon Power also includes access to the company’s SSD toolbox. While not as robust or polished as some of the bigger brands, SP Toolbox enables end-users to monitor the SSD’s SMART data and run diagnostic tests.

A Closer Look

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(Image credit: Tom’s Hardware)

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(Image credit: Tom’s Hardware)

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(Image credit: Tom’s Hardware)

Silicon Power’s UD70 comes in a compact single-sided M.2 2280 form factor at all capacities, enabling broad compatibility. Like the US70, the UD70 isn’t the best-looking M.2 SSD we’ve come across. The blue PCB and red-themed sticker clash, and the compliance marks and barcodes detract from the aesthetic even more.

(Image credit: Tom’s Hardware)

At the heart of the UD70 is a Phison PS5012-E12S PCIe 3.0 x4 8-channel NVMe 1.3 complaint SSD controller. The E12S utilizes dual Arm Cortex R5 CPUs clocked in at 666 MHz and leverages CoXProcessor 2.0 technology (dual coprocessors) to help maintain a consistent latency profile during write workloads.

The controller is built on a 12nm node and uses a smaller physical design than its predecessor, the original E12, downsizing from a 16×16 mm to a 12x12mm package, but retaining the same performance. This enables more flexible NAND placement to allow for up to four NAND emplacements on a single side of the PCB, while the original could only handle up to two.  

The controller leverages active state power management (ASPM) and autonomous power state transition (ASPT). The company dubs these features a ‘dual self-cooling system,’ but this tech is found in most of the other NVMe SSDs on the market.

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The controller caches its FTL metadata with a single 4Gb Kingston DDR3L DRAM chip on our 2TB review sample. The controller interfaces with sixteen dies of Micron’s 1Tb N28A 96-layer QLC flash that operate at 666 MTps. Each die is split into four virtual planes, as Micron’s design leverages a tile-based architecture for both performance and reliability. Micron claims the floating gate architecture provides better data retention than most charge trap flash designs. 

MORE: Best SSDs

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Read the full article at Tom's Hardware

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keywords: NAND  Review  Software  SSD  

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