Performance is undeniably strong in the right scenario, however the real-world benefit remains questionable during regular use...
Appreciating that enthusiasts will be eager to adopt ultra-high-speed storage on the very latest AMD Ryzen platforms, a number of manufacturers have been quick off the mark with latest-generation PCIe Gen 4 solutions in the popular M.2 form factor.
Quick to enter the fray is Seagate, whose FireCuda 520 sets its sights on the gaming market with the promise of headline sequential read and write speeds of 5,000MB/s and 4,400MB/s, respectively.
Such figures are achieved through an increasingly common combination of Phison E16 controller and Toshiba 96-layer TLC NAND, and Seagate backs the drive with a decent endurance rating and a five-year warranty as standard. Performance is undeniably strong in the right scenario, however the real-world benefit remains questionable during regular use, and the price premium over mature PCIe Gen 3 drives isn't easily justified.
Bottom line: want to experience cutting-edge storage on an AMD Ryzen platform? Seagate FireCuda 520 is a fine start, but expect prices to drop as competition heats up in 2020.
The Good
The Bad
5,000MB/s read and 4,400MB/s write
Takes advantage of PCIe Gen 4
on AMD Ryzen
Five-year warranty and big-name support
Caching performance still erratic
Significant price premium over Gen 3 drives
Seagate FireCuda 520 PCIe Gen 4 SSD
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The Seagate FireCuda 520 PCIe Gen 4 SSD is available to purchase from Scan Computers.
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