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Reviews of Kingston 2.5 inch SSDNOW V-Series SATA300

Testseek.co.uk have collected 126 expert reviews of the Kingston 2.5 inch SSDNOW V-Series SATA300 and the average rating is 80%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Kingston 2.5 inch SSDNOW V-Series SATA300.
Award: Most Awarded August 2009
August 2009
 
(80%)
126 Reviews
Users
(65%)
11 Reviews
80 0 100 126

The editors liked

  • Pluses
  • Worth a look to boost your aging laptop at limited cost
  • Good read performance
  • Faster than a hard disk
  • Software included
  • Huge read performance in RAID
  • Very cheap for an SSD
  • TRIM support
  • Less than £100
  • Speedy
  • No stutter

The editors didn't like

  • Minuses
  • Mediocre write speeds
  • Particularly for small files
  • TRIM support essential to conserve decent levels of performance
  • Expensive per gigabyte
  • Other SSDs are faster
  • Shonky random performance
  • Low capacity

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Reviews

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  Published: 2010-12-03, review by: tomshardware.co.uk

  • This article aims at enthusiasts who want to maximize storage performance and those who want to know how to best spend their moneyby either purchasing a single SSD or by going with a couple of low-budget, low-capacity solid state drives. Since most reta...

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  Published: 2010-11-18, review by: kitguru.net

  • High levels of performance, combined with a very tempting price point make this drive a winner....

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(90%)
 
  Published: 2010-11-11, review by: tomshardware.co.uk

  • Abstract:  The SSD market continues evolving. We got our hands on six drives we hadn't yet tested, including Samsung’s 470-series, and ran them through our benchmark suite. All told, this roundup includes a total of 24 SSDs to compare. Which drive is right for yo...

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  Published: 2010-06-20, review by: hardwareheaven.com

  • Abstract:  It should be noted that the 30GB model is really aimed at being a boot/OS drive and those who want to install applications without a dedicated storage drive will want to purchase the higher capacity models in the series (64GB for £99) or combine two of these in RAID 0, doubling..

 
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(80%)
 
  Published: 2010-05-19, review by: digitalversus.com

  • Pluses, Worth a look to boost your aging laptop at limited cost, Good read performance
  • Minuses, Mediocre write speeds, particularly for small files, TRIM support essential to conserve decent levels of performance

 
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(40%)
 
  Published: 2010-05-08, review by: techradar.com

  • Huge read performance in RAID, Very cheap for an SSD, TRIM support
  • Shonky random performance
  • The RAID option is interesting, but a larger single drive makes more sense...

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(80%)
 
  Published: 2010-05-06, review by: zdnet.co.uk

  • Abstract:  High prices for solid-state disks (SSDs) have historically restricted the business market to enterprises requiring performance for large databases or financial services, where microseconds really matter...

 
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  Published: 2010-04-13, review by: tomshardware.co.uk

  • Abstract:  New SSDs from Crucial, Kingston, and Western Digital haven’t made buying decisions any easier. In fact, buying the right drive just got more complex. One thing is clear, though: never, ever buy an SSD product without looking at..

 
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  Published: 2010-01-29, review by: techadvisor.co.uk

  • The Kingston SSDNow V-Series 128 GB drive is a reasonable trade-off between the factors of price, data capacity and speed/performance. It might have performed better, but the drive's onboard controller holds it back. While considering this SSD, take i...

 
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(70%)
 
  Published: 2010-01-06, review by: gadgetspeak.com

  • Abstract:  Earlier this year I saw a demonstration of Solid State Storage demonstrated at an event currently I understand it is available in 64 and 128GB. I was sent a 64GB unit to review by Kingston, their price seems quite reasonable....

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(92%)
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