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Review: Kioxia Exceria NVMe 1TB SSD

by Tarinder Sandhu on 10 July 2020, 12:01

Quick Link: HEXUS.net/qaemqj

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Conclusion

Effectively the RC500 by another name, the Exceria 1TB offers mid-pack performance at a recommended £105 price tag.

Kioxia may be a new name to our readers but don't let that fool you into thinking this is some small startup. The new face of Toshiba memory offers the choice of PCIe 3.0 x4 NVMe M.2 drives in Exceria Plus and Exceria flavours, with the latter topping out at 1TB.

Effectively the RC500 by another name, the Exceria 1TB offers mid-pack performance at a recommended £105 price tag, though we're still waiting on stock. Furthermore, compared to the competition in the same pricing segment, there's no hardware encryption, no 2TB option, and it becomes warm pretty quickly.

These observations take the shine off the drive because there are faster options with arguably even better value elsewhere in this congested market. Kioxia needs to push the price under £100 for it to be considered for recommendation.

The Good
 
The Bad
Predictable performance
Good value at £105
Five-year warranty as standard
 
Not available in 2TB capacity
No hardware security
Gets hot quickly

HEXUS.where2buy*

TBC.

HEXUS.right2reply

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.



HEXUS Forums :: 20 Comments

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Cheap as chips and, a lot faster than SATA. Great for a new build on a tight budget.
Wonder what they are doing with the OCZ brand then if they are knocking out consumer stuff with a new name.
Friesiansam
Cheap as chips and, a lot faster than SATA. Great for a new build on a tight budget.

Better price/performance opinions out there tbh, a budget machine is fine, but if saving a few ££ means a big dip in performance, that's a no from me….
'[GSV
Trig;4229524']Better price/performance opinions out there tbh, a budget machine is fine, but if saving a few ££ means a big dip in performance, that's a no from me….

Like what? £100 for an entry-level NVMe drive is equal to what everyone else is charging
Memlue doesn't quite have the same ring to it, right?

But surely they've missed a golden opportunity to be called Valory… ;)