Testseek.co.uk have collected 156 expert reviews of the Crucial / Micron 2.5 inch RealSSD M4 C400 Series SATA600 and the average rating is 85%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Crucial / Micron 2.5 inch RealSSD M4 C400 Series SATA600.
May 2011
(85%)
156 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
(83%)
2164 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
850100156
The editors liked
Latest 25nm NAND memory
6Gbps SATA support
Great performance
Works equally well with incompressible and compressible data
Consumers looking to purchase a high-end SSD upgrade are likely to make their choice based on three criteria; performance, capacity and price. Based on those key factors, we've seen few SATA 6Gbps drives as compelling as Crucial's 128GB m4 SSD. Priced...
Although it's not radically different from last year’s model, the M4 is significantly faster than the disk it replaces. Intel’s 510 Series SSDs are still dominant in our performance benchmarks, but both have the potential to be blown away by SandForce....
As for this specific 256GB Crucial model, £360 may still be a bit pricey for some but if you’re not a particularly data heavy laptop user or your system can accept some spinning platters for secondary storage, then I’d highly recommend the M4 as your...
The Crucial M4 has significantly increased the performance gap between it and the previous generation of SSDs. And by pushing write performance - for video capture and editing, graphical imaging, etc - the M4 provides an economical option for disk-inte...
Crucial set a high standard with the release of the RealSSD C300 a year ago. Still recognised as a speedy, premium drive, the C300's controller and NAND chips - the two major components of any modern SSD - have been tweaked for the release of the m4 r...
Looking first at the build quality and design of the Crucial m4 we have a drive which very much builds on everything which was good about the C300. We get a sturdy casing with nice finish and inside the good first impression continues. First up is the ...
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Published: 2013-01-06, Author: Andrew , review by: tomshardware.com
Abstract: The first mSATA-based SSDs we reviewed wowed us with diminutive dimensions, but not as much with performance. Today's best efforts are a lot more like their desktop equivalents, though. We round up 10 models between 64 and 256 GB and nail down a winner. ...