Home / Tech News / Featured Tech News / Samsung could make 1TB+ SSDs more affordable with industry’s first 4-bit consumer drives

Samsung could make 1TB+ SSDs more affordable with industry’s first 4-bit consumer drives

Samsung is ramping up its efforts with solid state drives, beginning mass production of the industry’s first commercial 4-bit quad-level cell (QLC) 4TB SSD. Once this has flooded the market, Samsung promises that 1TB SSDs will become much more affordable as a result.

Executive vice president of memory sales & marketing at Samsung Electronics, Jaesoo Han explains that “Samsung’s new 4-bit SATA SSD will herald a massive move to terabyte-SSDs for consumers. As we expand our lineup across consumer segments and to the enterprise, 4-bit terabyte-SSD products will rapidly spread throughout the entire market.”

This is all thanks to the more efficient production of 4-bit QLC NAND flash memory, while retaining the same performance level as a 3-bit SSD according to Samsung. The firm credits this to a 3-bit SSD controller and TurboWrite technology, allowing it to achieve unprecedented read and write speeds of up to 540MB/s and 520MB/s, respectively despite its higher bit count.

Almost all storage manufacturers are pushing higher in capacity, with Seagate unleashing a line of Barracuda SSDs earlier this year using 3-bit QLC chips. Toshiba announced its recent move to 4-bit QLC chips last month, incorporating its own variant of 3D NAND technology.

Samsung’s 4-bit QLC SSDs will come in 2.5-inch SATA format rather than the newer M.2 connection. This will be available in a variety of options, giving buyers the choice between a 1TB, 2TB or 4TB drive, although the firm has yet to reveal price points or a release window.

KitGuru Says: I’m sitting on quite an old SSD from 2012 at the moment, so I could certainly do with an upgrade in the near future and this seems like perfect timing. Are you looking to increase your storage options?

Become a Patron!

Check Also

Wolverine Creative Director joins Xbox to lead Perfect Dark reboot

The Initiative has signed up former Wolverine creative director, Brian Horton, to lead work on the new Perfect Dark game.