Gigabyte's AI Top SSD claims extreme 219,000 TBW endurance, leaves other drives in the dust

Shawn Knight

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Endurance king: Gigabyte has introduced a solid-state drive designed to accommodate intensive AI workloads. The new AI TOP 100E SSD is an M.2 2280, PCIe 4.0 drive with SMART and TRIM support. The 2 TB model is rated for up to 7,000 MB/s sequential reads and up to 5,900 MB/s sequential writes, and has 2 GB of LPDDR4 RAM. However, what really grabbed our attention is the drive's incredible endurance.

The 2 TB AI TOP 100E carries an astronomical 219,000 terabytes written (TBW) rating. For comparison, ordinary consumer drives like the Samsung 990 Pro PCIe 4.0 2 TB drive and Crucial's T500 2 TB are each rated for just 1,200 TBW. Others, like the Corsair MP600 2 TB, are a bit more robust at 3,600 TBW.

Gigabyte also offers a 1 TB variant with 1 GB of LPDDR4 that can hit sequential read speeds up to 7,200 MB/s and sequential writes of up to 6,500 MB/s, but the endurance is just half that of the 2 TB drive at 109,500 TBW.

Both come backed by a five-year warranty and have a mean time between failure rating of 1.6 million hours.

Gigabyte isn't marketing these as enterprise or server-grade SSDs, but rather simply notes that they could be used for AI workloads. Indeed, if you are the type that works with large chunks of data on a daily basis or are otherwise paranoid about the endurance of standard solid-state drives, something like this may be worth looking into. Pricing and availability haven't yet been revealed.

If raw speed is more your jam, Gigabyte's Aorus Gen5 14000 would likely be a better fit.

The 2 TB variant boasts sequential read speeds up to 14,500 MB/s and sequential writes up to 12,700. It is paired with 4 GB of LPDDR4 external cache and has a TBW rating of 1,400. You will need a board that supports PCIe Gen5 M.2, but that's not too hard to come by these days – even at budget price points.

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"The 2 TB AI TOP 100E carries an astronomical terabytes written (TBW) rating of 219,000."

You can expect the price to be astronomical as well once they announce it.

Yeah, I'd add it's probably not for gamers even as much as ppl might argue the sense in PCIe gens 3, 4 and 5 for that use. My 990 Pro 2Tb and 980 Pro 2Tb (both 1200 TBW) are currently at 5.2 and 8.5 Tb written for 1.5 and 2.5 years use respectively. Great drives, and re the speed an absolute must from boots to modern AAA game load times... but at current rate they will be obsolete long before they are run into the ground.

Otoh I haven't bought a HDD intending any actual use since 2016 (the one outlier being whatever ships with a gaming laptop etc, which gets swapped out asap) Any SATA SSD's I've had (starting from the above date) have simply been transferred over from replaced/upgraded systems to perform the 'HDD role' in the new.

Obviously, if my uses included either massive storage requirements and/or a level of productivity to generate income, which might do better for a massive TBW cap, I'd choose differently. The drive in the article might be that. But as it is the generally higher cost of the drives I do have (though I tend to buy in sales) are more than offset by the better focus for my uses, and the reliability/performance to keep up through several years and tiers of upgrades.
 
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