![usb connected ssd health test usb connected ssd health test](https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/41e9jtNPttL.jpg)
- #Usb connected ssd health test update#
- #Usb connected ssd health test upgrade#
- #Usb connected ssd health test windows 10#
- #Usb connected ssd health test pro#
This should also have the effect of allowing more power to the NVME drive when needed (USB has limited power)Īnyway, I'm planning on using the RTL drive for everyday use so far it seems the best choice. I believe that the RTL controller is using a more advanced process and will also run cooler/use less energy. I have a suspicion that the RTL drive is handing power saving/modes correctly and other two may not? It also seems to stay cool if it is not being used (other two stay warm) Runs a lot cooler than the above two (I have a heatsink tab applied to the NVME drive) RTL9210 - Only had for a few days but seems to play well with both Intel Laptop (Thunderbolt port) and Ryzen x570 Cannot recommend ASM2362 for x570 systems suspect the power management being an issue with this chipset/driver - a problem just having the drive drop out on a USB error!
#Usb connected ssd health test windows 10#
Left the drive plugged in and on two separate occasions Windows 10 received a USB device error after a period of non activity (drive was noticeably warm as well). Update: Using this with an AData 1TB SX8100 on a Ryzen x570 systemĬopied several large multi-GB files using the USB 3.1 Gen 1 5Gbps port no problem. The drive gets fairly warm (similar to JMS583) Haven't really done any exhaustive testing
#Usb connected ssd health test update#
No errors in event viewer so may have been some other unrelated issue?įull disclosure I did update the JMB583 firmware that *another* vendor provided (hopefully this was not a bad idea)ĪSM2362 - Seems to run fine on an X570 MB and Intel obj couldn't be read to build the library when building on the external SSD However, Visual Studio started to give trouble where the. JMS583 - Seemed to work ok on Intel Laptop at first
![usb connected ssd health test usb connected ssd health test](https://hddscan.com/img/doc/14.jpg)
The Realtek9210 is the most scarce but was able to order one from here I ended up with an external NVME for each chipset. The ones that I do see are REALLY sketchy looking.įWIW, I've tried using a Toshiba BG4 and XG6 SSDs - both of which are less power hungry NVMe drives, and still had no success with JMS583 on the AMD systems. I'd like to try an ASM2362 based enclosure, but they're somewhat expensive, and hard to find. I commonly transfer ~40GB+ VMs from one machine to another and would really appreciate being able to take advantage of ~1GB/s transfers. but I specifically have the B450-I to take advantage of dual M.2 slots on the motherboard, and there aren't currently any other brands offering that feature on an ITX board. (MSI I think?) and then they were able to get USB 3.1 G2 to work. They'd returned an ASUS board and swapped it for another brand. I remember reading somewhere (another forum - I don't remember which) where a member suggested it might be an implementation issue with ASUS AMD boards. If I plug the drive into one of the USB 3.1 G1 ports, the enclosure is perfectly stable, but it maxes out right around 400MB/s, even though it says it us using UASP.
#Usb connected ssd health test upgrade#
I was able to upgrade the JMS583 firmware to v206 using the package from mydigitalssd, but it didn't really change anything. The enclosure usually doesn't even show up, but if it does I can only transfer a few GB of data before it randomly disconnects.
#Usb connected ssd health test pro#
Similar to what others report, it seems to work fine on an Intel Thunderbolt port.Īttempts to use it with 2 different AMD boards, an ASUS PRIME X470 PRO and an ASUS ROG STRIX B450-I boards on the USB 3.1 G2 ports have been mostly unsuccessful. I picked up a no-name JMS583 based enclosure on Amazon for cheap. You can help if you can point me to a STABLE and RELIABLE NVMe-USB-C adapter that WORKS as expected. I know SSD's very well, so please stick to the point and don't start to educate me on how their speed falls after some writes, etc. I would really appreciate any feedback from those who have GOOD experiences during stress-tests, like tons of random 4k writes with a stable speed, cloning 100's of GB-s at a stable high speed close to 1GB/s. There are 3 main chipsets in the market: JMicron JMS583, Asmedia ASM2362, and Realtek RTL9210 ( no product has surfaced with the latter yet, so no REAL reviews, experiences yet UPDATE: it is on the market already).Īlso ASUS has a new product, ROG Strix Arion, but there isn't enough feedback about it yet, and I mean real life feedback not just being able to run a few benchmarks, but real stress test to see if the device (adapter) can keep it up, without disconnecting or slowing down hard.
![usb connected ssd health test usb connected ssd health test](https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/514cgMU6uAL.jpg)
So far all adapter's reviews contain frighteningly high % of reports of malfunction, random disconnects, sub-par speeds, falling to even under USB 2.0 speeds, etc. I'm looking to buy a *RELIABLE* NVME-USB external adapter, that doesn't disconnect randomly, can keep up the close to 1GB/s speed.