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.
At nearly $1,500 the Sabrent Rocket Q 8TB NVMe PCIe M.2 2280 SSD is not going to be a drive that the average consumer is going to run out and buy. Heck, most gamers would be happy to spend $1,500 on an entire desktop or laptop! We get that, but we also un...
The Rocket Q is a product we can recommend, but as stated the people will judge on endurance, and QLC has a bit of that scare factor. Writing 25 GB per day every day each year would still make this SSD last 28 years, and that is a reality. As such I see t...
Published: 2020-06-07, Author: Les , review by: thessdreview.com
When we first started this report we discussed the Sabrent Rocket Q NVMe SSD being 4TB and questioned as to whether it might become the norm in today's storage world, as digital storage grows. As we speak, there are few, if any, other companies that will...
Source: Rich Edmonds / Windows CentralYou should shortlist the Sabrent rocket Q SSD for your PC, especially if you're upgrading from a SATA HDD or SSD. The boost in performance with even a more affordable storage module such as this cannot be overstated...
Highly competitive pricing, Large SLC cache, Excellent performance even when thermally throttled, Good random write IOPS, 2 TB and 4 TB versions available, Five-year warranty, Much higher sequential speeds than SATA drives, Compact form factor
Some thermal throttling at highest load, Very low write performance when SLC cache is exhausted, Thermal reporting inaccurate
The 1 TB Sabrent Rocket Q is currently listed on Amazon for $130. Highly competitive pricing Large SLC cache Excellent performance even when thermally throttled Good random write IOPS 2 TB and 4 TB versions available Five-year warranty Much higher sequen...
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...
Published: 2020-12-07, Author: Konrad , review by: altomdata.dk
Abstract: Datalager er måske ikke et begreb, der kan sætte blodet i kog, som en cpu eller et grafikkort gør det, men det er i stigende grad en vigtig komponent i ethvert gamingsystem. Det ser ud til, at næste generations konsoller begge vil få mest muligt ud af der...
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...
Abstract: Sabrent has been on an absolute tear since late last year, and they have easily been the most innovative in the last six months. Sabrent has pushed the market forward significantly for those loving high capacity solutions, enough so large players like Sam...
Abstract: Sabrent's 8TB Rocket Q caps a few weeks of mind-blowing news for NVMe SSDs. It seems like only yesterday when 2TB was the largest-capacity NVMe SSD, or any SSD for that matter. Actually, when I started this article it was yesterday. Now we have the 4TB OW...