Testseek.co.uk have collected 27 expert reviews of the Sabrent M.2 2280 Rocket Series NVMe PCIe and the average rating is 90%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Sabrent M.2 2280 Rocket Series NVMe PCIe.
June 2020
(90%)
27 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Large capacity option, Good performance, High compatibility with M.2 2280 form factor, Good quality in drive and package, Acronis True Image included
High price due to large capacity,
The Sabrent Rocket with 4TB capacity isn't cheap, but that is to be expected with such a capacity. At the time of this review, it can be yours for £749.99 in the UK and $849.99 in the US. If you're looking for something a little cheaper, take a look at th...
Published: 2019-11-20, Author: Andrew , review by: techteamgb.co.uk
Abstract: PCIe Gen 4 SSDs are still pretty new, they only came about with the launch of AMD's X570 chipset and third generation Ryzen CPUs. Back when they launched, I reviewed the AORUS Gen 4 drive with it's chonky copper heatsink, but now there's a few more option...
Very Good Performance (, 3450, MB/s Read & 3, 000, MB/s Write), 1.8 Million Hours MTBF, High Endurance (6070TBW), - 5 Years Limited Warranty (After Registration), Acronis True Image Software, High Efficiency Heatsink Available (Sold Extra), Rocket Contro
Published: 2020-07-30, Author: Les , review by: thessdreview.com
If you are looking for a powerful SSD that can take on out of the ordinary tasks, the Sabrent Rocket NVMe SSD fits the bill. But that is key to it all isn't it? Knowing what you need the SSD for. Where TLC NAND flash memory used to be a value level memory...
Excellent random and sequential write performance, Minimal performance loss from thermal throttling, Decent write-rate sustainability, 2 TB and 4 TB variants available, Five-year warranty, Much higher sequential speeds than SATA drives, Compact form facto
Small SLC cache, Price a little bit on the high side, Some thermal throttling, Thermal sensor off by around 15°C
The 1 TB Sabrent Rocket SSD currently retails for $150. Excellent random and sequential write performance Minimal performance loss from thermal throttling Decent write-rate sustainability 2 TB and 4 TB variants available Five-year warranty Much higher se...
Published: 2020-07-16, Author: Tom , review by: overclock3d.net
There is a simplicity to the looks of an M.2 drive which belie their complexity under the hood. This was rarely more apparent that when we reviewed the Sabrent Rocket Q, a drive whose controller spent a lot of time writing data to QLC memory it had conver...
Honestly, we can find very little wrong with the Sabrent Rocket NVMe4 model M.2 SSD other then you need to platform to support PCIe Gen4 and really yearn that peak performance to show off, it is very fast didn't stumble into write holes and did not overhe...
Published: 2020-04-14, Author: Ben , review by: hothardware.com
Abstract: It's been nine months since AMD unleashed its Zen 2 processors and, more importantly as it related to this article, the X570 chipset with its PCI Express 4 connectivity, into the world. In the time since then, there hasn't been a torrent of extra-fast fla...
I can find very little wrong with the Sabrent Rocket. The Phison controller has proven itself over the past two years and is offering terrific performance over PCIe Gen 3.0. This is a super-fast TLC based M.2 SSD that ticks most right boxes as on most wor...