FAST 12TB Steam Drive for CHEAP!!

Linus Tech Tips ·Linus Tech Tips ·2019-05-06 · 1,284 words · ~6 min read
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0:00 when it launched in 2017 optane memory
0:03 this little module here was positioned as enabling SSD-like performance on a
0:09 hard drive but only for a boot drive a significant
0:14 limitation because the supported motherboards were so new that it was
0:18 likely they'd already be running an SSD for their os anyway so the technology
0:25 worked well but the value proposition
0:28 for enthusiasts like me in particular was a little tough to find which is why
0:33 when Intel reached out about doing a sponsored video on optane we said
0:38 sorry we're legitimately hashtag out of ideas unless you guys could add support
0:44 for accelerating like a secondary game drive or something well funny story they
0:49 did it so we made a lightning fast 12 terabyte
0:54 steam drive on the cheap
1:04 all right so for the uninitiated 3d crosspoint is a non-volatile memory
1:09 technology jointly developed by Intel and micron what makes it different from
1:13 the nand flash that you'd find in a typical SSD is its much higher endurance
1:18 that is how many times you can write to it and it's much lower latency with a
1:23 price that's comfortably in between RAM and nand flash so the idea here is that
1:29 even though our 32 Gigabyte module is
1:33 only point two percent
1:37 of the capacity of our 12 terabyte drive
1:40 here its read speeds and in particular
1:43 its access latency should give even a
1:46 really large storage drive like this SSD
1:50 like performance because the files that need to get accessed all the time aren't
1:55 actually that big so as a baseline then
1:58 we're gonna start by testing game loading times off of two standalone
2:03 drives a hard drive and a high capacity
2:07 SSD
2:10 in this corner we've got seagate's
2:13 barracuda pro 12 terabyte hard drive boasting a sustained
2:18 transfer rate of 250 megabytes per second and a humongous 256 megabyte cash
2:27 man that's like the same amount of RAM as my first pc
2:31 and in the opposite corner we've got the 3.84
2:36 terabyte pm863assd
2:40 coming straight out of samsung with vnandflash up to 520 megabytes per
2:45 second sequential reads and four gigabytes of cash it doesn't have the
2:51 best dollar per gig ratio but this is a
2:54 battle of the heavyweights
2:58 yeah yeah okay sorry i'll stop this shtick now
3:04 before starting our tests we picked a handful of games that would be
3:08 impractical to store on a dedicated SSD
3:12 unless you're a mega baller gta 5 fallout 4 witcher 3 and deus ex they all
3:17 take up a ton of space then we maxed out the in-game graphics settings and loaded
3:22 a pre-leveled save game with a few dozen mods loaded into skyrim to simulate a
3:27 more realistic scenario for anyone who's still playing skyrim we used assassin's
3:31 creed origins discovery mode load times and the first level of the campaign in
3:36 for honor each set was run three times with reboots in between we also did
3:41 three back-to-back sets with the hard drive without rebooting to see what
3:46 effect its huge cash would have
3:49 so we didn't see anything unexpected overall
3:54 but what was cool was that the large cash built right into this drive does seem to
3:59 have an effect on its loading times in some of the titles as long as the system
4:04 doesn't get rebooted in between this could be a really good sign for our
4:08 opt-in accelerated drive because unlike a cache built into the drive the data
4:14 stays on it in between boots
4:17 and with the exception of witcher 3 and
4:21 for honor the load times of our combined solution tanked below that of a bare
4:27 hard drive but there's nothing unexpected here like accelerating a boot
4:32 drive it's the nature of the caching beast that before it's had a chance to
4:37 analyze the data it'll perform the same
4:40 or maybe even worse so
4:43 let's give this a reboot and do it again
4:47 interesting so as it turns out it only
4:51 took a second run for our hard drive
4:55 optane combo to drop its loading times
4:58 in every title except for witcher 3 to
5:02 the same or faster levels than a regular
5:06 SSD so we are actually going to have to reboot one more time and see if this
5:11 continues during our third run the already impressive results
5:16 stayed about the same with assassin's creed dropping below SSD level load
5:22 times and then even gta 5 showing a
5:25 slight improvement so this is really cool we can see a couple
5:30 of things at play here so first of all the cache is working
5:35 second it does work across reboots and
5:38 third there is a big advantage to running it like this over even just
5:43 having a bigger dram cache on your hard drive because it's so big it can hold
5:48 enough data to cache multiple modern titles so even if you're not the
5:53 kind of person who just plays the same couple of games over and over you can
5:58 still benefit from it but will every gamer benefit
6:02 so we did a few more runs with reboots in between in order to find out and we
6:06 found some interesting things here some games continue to improve and actually
6:11 widen their gap from a dedicated SSD while some games don't scale at all so
6:17 how about the value proposition then well while your typical SATA SSD from a
6:22 reputable brand comes in at about 300
6:25 per terabyte a combination of a seagate hard drive and an optane module comes
6:30 down to as low as 38 dollars per terabyte for legit SSD grade performance
6:37 at least in all of the tests that we ran this is somewhat offset by the fact that
6:41 accelerating a second drive requires an
6:44 8th gen Intel core processor and 300
6:48 series chipset as opposed to 7th gen and 200 series for primary drive
6:52 acceleration but it is something for anyone who is running that platform to
6:57 keep in mind so thanks Intel for allowing data drive caching now i can go
7:02 back to the satisfying sound of hard drive clickety clicks without giving up
7:06 speed this is something that i have been asking for since optane launched i even
7:12 asked about it when i attended the pre-launch briefing because it makes so
7:16 much more sense for enthusiasts because for your os you can buy a full-blown SSD
7:21 or if you're that hardcore and obtain 900p and run the whole thing in octane
7:25 rather than using caching but it's just not cost effective for a game drive
7:29 where you can easily have multiple terabytes of files that you only access
7:33 once in a while or in some cases never
7:36 humble bundle sorry excuse me it's also worth noting that aside from
7:42 games file search times improved though with that said i'm not sure if i would
7:46 get one of our writers to use my photo library as a test case for this next
7:52 time around so thanks for watching guys if you disliked this video you know what to do
7:56 but if it was awesome get subscribed hit that like button or check out the link to where to buy the stuff we featured in
8:01 the video description also down there is our merch store which has cool shirts
8:04 like this one i'm not sure if this one will still be there it's limited edition but um
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