Home / Component / SSD Drives / Samsung’s tiny 2TB SSD is now available

Samsung’s tiny 2TB SSD is now available

Following on from its announcement back at CES in January, Samsung's tiny 2TB SSD known as the ‘Samsung T3' is now available. The Samsung T3 SSD comes with some significant upgrades based on feedback from the launch of the T1. Not only has Samsung improved things from a storage capacity standpoint, but it also claims to deliver “outstanding performance” and a durability boost for those who lead a mobile lifestyle.

While the T1 came in a plastic casing, Samsung has opted for a metal housing for the 2TB T3 drive in order to better protect it from damage.The Samsung Portable T3 SSD comes with sequential read and write speeds of up to 450MB/s and includes a USB 3.1 interface, making it up to four times faster than an external hard drive depending on the scenario.

PortableSSD_T3_Main-e1451928620673

While the 2TB version of the T3 is really the star of the show, Samsung is also releasing 250GB, 500GB and 1TB versions of this drive. The drive comes with a three-year warranty and should be coming to the US, Europe, China and Korea this year. Pricing in the US is set to be $129.99 for the 250GB version, $219.99 for the 500 GB, $429.99 for the 1TB and $849.99 for the flagship 2 TB version.

KitGuru Says: It is always great to see advancements being made in the SSD space. Do any of you currently use external/portable storage? Would you consider switching from a portable HDD to and SSD now that higher capacities are available?

Become a Patron!

Check Also

Solidigm unveils world’s largest PCIe SSD

Solidigm looks to solidify its leadership position in the AI market with its new 122TB PCIe SSD, the highest capacity PCIe drive in the world.

One comment

  1. Søren Chr. Nielsen

    My biggest gripe with any external storage has long been the slow transfer speeds. For smaller file sizes it’s perfect, but once you start moving towards large-volume folders or really large single files (like raw video footage) things start to get slow. With external drives like this, I expect to be saving all types of file-sizes and so the speed becomes important. With these transfer speeds I might finally get an external drive that won’t have me sigh deeply before I even start transferring files to it! =)