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Review: Corsair Flash Voyager GS (256GB)

by Parm Mann on 12 November 2013, 15:00

Tags: Corsair

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High-speed USB 3.0 flash drives are one of life's little treasures. Small enough to fit into your pocket, spacious enough to store masses of content, and fast enough not to keep you waiting: they're the sort of accessory that every regular PC user should have.

And as we've often said in the past, you needn't break the bank to step into the world of USB 3.0 devices. 32GB flash drives are readily available for under £20, and these cheap-and-cheerful solutions tend to be sufficient for most consumers. But the technology is moving forward on a couple of key fronts - both speed and capacity are on the up, while NAND flash prices have fallen - so high-end users may want to try something a little more advanced.

Corsair's Flash Voyager GS, available in 64GB (£70), 128GB (£90) and 256GB (£190) capacities, ought to fit the bill.

Introduced as the company's latest high-performance, high-capacity model, the Flash Voyager GS is a visible departure from the firm's usual drive design. The rubberised shell of older models such as the Voyager GT has been replaced by a brushed-metal enclosure that claims to be scratch resistant.

We quite like the feel of our 256GB review sample and it does a good job of repelling fingerprints, but the drive does look awfully familiar. There's a reason for that, as it seems both Corsair and Patriot have been shopping at the same manufacturer - the Flash Voyager GS is housed in the same chassis as the Supersonic Magnum that's already on the market.

Corsair's business-like black-and-grey body is in our estimation more stylish than Patriot's black-with-blue-highlights, and in addition to the sleeker colour scheme, Corsair has included a helpful activity LED in the back of the device. Other than that, both drives are physically identical. Each measures 0.9cm (D) x 2.7cm (W) x 7.8cm (H) in size and tips the scales at 25g, making the drive convenient to carry around.

Corsair Flash Voyager GS Specification

Capacity
Read Speed
Write Speed
MSRP
64GB
260MB/s
70MB/s
$95
128GB
260MB/s
90MB/s
$135
256GB
260MB/s
105MB/s
$255

Yet, while the design is suitably light, there is room for improvement and some of the bugbears we identified with the Patriot drive are still present here. If you decide to attach a lanyard to the loop at the rear, you lose the ability to stow the cap, and even when the cap is stowed, it doesn't feel particularly secure and we suspect lost caps are going to be a common thing.

And while the Voyager GS is reasonably small, it's still a bit bigger than we'd like for a USB flash drive. During use on a couple of different laptops, we found that the above-average width would obstruct adjacent ports, so that's worth bearing in mind if your laptop's I/O ports are particularly close together.

It's worth noting, also, that high-performance users will be wary of the fact that it's cheaper to purchase, say, a 256GB SSD and a high-quality external enclosure. Depending on the specification of the drive, performance is likely to be far greater. But Corsair's Voyager GS is a balancing act, and it attempts to find an optimum blend of portability, convenience, capacity and speed.

Despite the size constraint, the Voyager GS series is able to cram in up to 256GB of storage, and read and write speeds are officially rated at up to 260MB/s and 105MB/s, respectively. The smaller-capacity models will see write performance reduced as a result of having fewer NAND flash memory chips interfacing with the associated controller, but overall speeds are decent for a drive of this ilk.

In our own benchmarks on a fresh Intel Haswell test platform running Windows 8.1, we were able to record specification-beating maximum sequential read and write speeds of 284MB/s and 188MB/s, respectively. The numbers are, unsurprisingly, a mirror of what's available from the Supersonic Magnum, though the Voyager GS does have one real advantage over the immediate competition: Corsair's £190 asking price is more competitive than Patriot's £215.

Both drives are quick when hooked-up to a USB 3.0 interface, yet as we've seen in the past, these high-capacity models achieve optimal speeds when dealing with large file transfers. Our File Copy tests reveal that performance is excellent with large data types such as ISOs, but when transferring a game directory (mixed-size files) or a program directory (small files), performance drops off noticeably.

Bottom line: Well adept at transferring large quantities of data at pace, Corsair's Voyager GS can be recommended to users who crave USB 3.0 speed and up to 256GB of storage in a package that's barely bigger than a pack of Wrigley's. Factor in the sub-£200 price tag, and this becomes one of the more attractive high-end flash drives available today.


The Good

Great performance with large files
Available in capacities up to 256GB
Sturdy brushed-metal enclosure
Five year warranty


The Bad

May obstruct adjacent ports
Performance drops off with smaller files


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Corsair Flash Voyager GS (256GB)

HEXUS.where2buy

The Corsair Flash Voyager GS USB 3.0 flash drive is available to purchase in a choice of capacities at Scan Computers*.

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At HEXUS, we invite the companies whose products we test to comment on our articles. If any company representatives for the products reviewed choose to respond, we'll publish their commentary here verbatim.



*UK-based HEXUS community members are eligible for free delivery and priority customer service through the SCAN.care@HEXUS forum.



HEXUS Forums :: 9 Comments

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I guess we are not far away from 512 gb & 1 TB versions…
256GB! My first USB stick was a 128mb one which cost me ~£32 in around 2003, if memory serves.

Lasted me, in infrequent use, until around 2010 when it was handed to my sister-in-law with some pics of her wedding, never to return :(
I wonder if it'd work better than a harddrive as a bootdrive, the numbers sound better than a mechanical drive anyway.
With sizes like that, and such levels of performance, the line between these and SSDs begins to blur (physical connections aside). Makes you start to wonder about what controllers are in there, and how closely such drives mirror their SATA counterparts… Given that the 256gb version costs more than a 256gb SSD, one wonders whether similar wear-level and garbage collection routines should be in place, and so on…

Indeed, such a USB drive should really be suitable for use as a portable OS drive, with a suitably plug'n'play OS… ( well, I can do it with an ARM board ;) )
At these kind of sizes I'd rather have an SSD in a good quality enclosure.

You'd get better performance and better reliability and feature set.
It would obviously use more room up but I'd hardly keep a £190 flash drive on my keychain.