Silent_Buddha
Legend
You need to use a heat cure epoxy, it's designed for this.
I wish Silverstone and other companies would use it. Grrrrrrrrr.
Regards,
SB
You need to use a heat cure epoxy, it's designed for this.
I'd personally would want the speed offered by ssd.@Shompola even external HDD are sufficient for those BC games.
Hi,
You guys think a Seagate One Touch SSD with USB 3.0 interface with measured 400MB/s read is sufficient as an external SSD for XBOX, XBOX 360 and XBOX One games? It is the cheapest external SSD I can find locally. Are the more expensive 3.1. Gen 2 a better fit in the long run? I can only afford 500GB for the time being. Thanks in advance.
I am not in US. I am in EU. Roughly 70USD for 500GB Seagate One Touch. I believe 1TB is a bit too expensive right now, 110USD or so for that Seagate which may very well be one of the slowest around with USB 3.x? I am not aware of its write speed. if the penalty is huge I may re-consider. I need to finance the XSX too so that is why I am cheaping out a bit. I plan to run the games off the external drive. I have considered internal SSD with enclosure but have not really looked at them. I will have a look. Black Friday is also smart.. Thanks for the advices.
Writes don't really matter for games however. Its about the read speed and reading doesn't affect the life span of the drive really. Most gaming websites would recommend a ssd with cache for your OS drive or somethign with a lot of writing like video editing or file transfering. But most will say a cache less drive is fine for gamingOne thing to keep in mind when shopping for an SSD, some of them have extensive write penalty where performance tanks majorly as soon as you're writing more than 50 GBs or the drive is more than 50% full. This is the situation on a few that go for the cheapest price and use DRAMless controllers and very low proportions to SLC write cache.
Also, saving $10 (~10%) may not be worth it if you may get pulled into a warranty claim a year or so down the line. So going with larger and stable name brand may ease any potential headaches down the line.
Mostly correct. But quick resume will hammer in writes depending on how often your family is swapping titles in given sessions.You can also get a 3.5 inch desktop drive and put it in an enclosure or even just a pre made one. It will be faster than the drives in the xbox one x but not as fast as an ssd. The trick is you can get really high capacities for cheap
https://www.amazon.com/Book-Desktop...DAM2BWGXSA4J&refRID=2ASSVERWDAM2BWGXSA4J&th=1
Writes don't really matter for games however. Its about the read speed and reading doesn't affect the life span of the drive really. Most gaming websites would recommend a ssd with cache for your OS drive or somethign with a lot of writing like video editing or file transfering. But most will say a cache less drive is fine for gaming
Yea butMostly correct. But quick resume will hammer in writes depending on how often your family is swapping titles in given sessions.
Yea but
https://techreport.com/review/27909/the-ssd-endurance-experiment-theyre-all-dead/
The Intel 335 240gig died around 700TB of writes .Even the TLC drives hit 200TB of writes before wear accrued and a 300TB writen it failed a hash check for unpowered data retention. They continued to use it up to 800TB when it finally started having more issues and died between 900TB and a Petabyte of rights . It was a 240gig ssd btw
I don't think your going to do enough writing for any of these drives to actually die out
Btw the drive i linked to has a 256M cache
Yep, confirmed by Mr Beard Guy on Major Nelsons podcast yesterday.From what was said in one of the many SeriesX previews, the Quick Resume section is done entirely on the internal NVME regardless of where the game was launched from, even if using the official external NVME Storage Card.
From what was said in one of the many SeriesX previews, the Quick Resume section is done entirely on the internal NVME regardless of where the game was launched from, even if using the official external NVME Storage Card.
From what I remember its approx:A 1TB (decimal) drive should equate to about 950 GB binary. Reports show 802 GB useable for XSX, so about 148GB is taken up by the system. That would appear to be plenty of space for storing resume states at a level better than QLC.
From what I remember its approx:
800GB free after format and OS (internal)
900GB without OS (cartridge)
I'll try and remember who reported it.
So 100GB for OS and QR didn't actually sound to bad to me.
I do wonder if QR is now compressed. Hence could explain speed difference compared to when DF saw it earlier in year.
Edit:
Actual figures
Internal free: 802GB
Cartridge free: 920GB
3min in
I do wonder if QR is now compressed. Hence could explain speed difference compared to when DF saw it earlier in year.
Writes in relation to Quick Resume isn't only about write endurance, it's also about write speed. As Brit mentioned, if the drive is DRAM-less or doesn't have enough so called "SLC" cache (which isn't really SLC) then your write speed will drop to 1/10th or more of what it could be once the drive fills up enough that you have to delete the contents of cells in order to write new data. This can happen even at 50% or less capacity used due to wear leveling if the drive isn't provisioned for it. TLC and QLC drives suffer heavily from this. It's why many enthusiasts weren't thrilled about the 980 PRO switching to TLC NAND from the MLC used on their previous PRO drives.
Basically if it's a cheap drive and MS somehow decides to let you use an external USB SSD for quick resume and you hit a situation where the write penalty kicks in, instead of quick swapping to another game taking just 6-10 seconds, it might now take over a minute just to write the contents of memory to the SSD...at which point it's no longer quick resume.
However, I'd be surprised if MS allows for this use case. So instead it'll just potentially take you hours to copy a game to external USB SSD from the internal or external NVME drive...or to install a BC game to the external USB SSD.
This is happening with the internal NVME SSD in my Asus Surface Clone that I got a few years back. They cheaped out on the drive and now after more than around 10 GB of writes, it'll suddenly take multiple minutes to copy just 1 GB of data. Not fun.
So even NVME drives aren't immune if you buy a cheap budget brand drive.
Regards,
SB
For games it's 13.5 GB on SeriesX and likely 8 GB on Series S. There's 32 Meg of fastest pool reserved for OS/Dashboard use on SeriesX, and suspect the same on SeriesS.