Samsung PM9A3 960GB M.2 (PCIE 4.0 x4) Nvme SSD MZ1L2960HCJR-00A07
$298.01
Samsung PM9A3 960GB M.2 (PCIE 4.0 x4) Nvme SSD MZ1L2960HCJR-00A07
Best Seller Ranking |
#1 in Enterprise SSDs |
---|---|
Brand |
SAMSUNG |
Series |
PM9A3 |
Part Number |
MZ1L2960HCJR-00A07 |
Form Factor |
M.2 |
Capacity |
960GB |
Interface |
PCI-Express 4.0 x4 |
Max Sequential Read |
Up To 6800mbps |
Max Sequential Write |
Up To 4000mbps |
4KB Random Read |
Up to 1,000,000 IOPS |
4KB Random Write |
Up to 180,000 IOPS |
First Listed on Newegg |
August 06 ,2023 |
2 reviews for Samsung PM9A3 960GB M.2 (PCIE 4.0 x4) Nvme SSD MZ1L2960HCJR-00A07


MAECENAS IACULIS
Vestibulum curae torquent diam diam commodo parturient penatibus nunc dui adipiscing convallis bulum parturient suspendisse parturient a.Parturient in parturient scelerisque nibh lectus quam a natoque adipiscing a vestibulum hendrerit et pharetra fames nunc natoque dui.
ADIPISCING CONVALLIS BULUM
- Vestibulum penatibus nunc dui adipiscing convallis bulum parturient suspendisse.
- Abitur parturient praesent lectus quam a natoque adipiscing a vestibulum hendre.
- Diam parturient dictumst parturient scelerisque nibh lectus.
Scelerisque adipiscing bibendum sem vestibulum et in a a a purus lectus faucibus lobortis tincidunt purus lectus nisl class eros.Condimentum a et ullamcorper dictumst mus et tristique elementum nam inceptos hac parturient scelerisque vestibulum amet elit ut volutpat.
Kyle B. –
Pros: – Supposed to be good.
– Was on sale for a good price. Cons: – Bought this because I thought it would fit a Lenovo Tiny PC M90Q. Wanted to use it as a VM host drive in Proxmox. Newegg listing just says m.2 and doesn’t list the size. I admittedly didn’t look up the m.2 size from the Samsung product page and assumed it was a regular m.2 2280. Once I got it I realized it was too long to fit. Looked up the information on the product page from Samsung and see this drive ONLY comes in m.2 22110. There was no way to make this fit in the M90Q specifically.
Just beware this is an m.2 22110 drive not a standard m.2 2280 like most NVME SSDs. Overall Review: – Research on this drive shows fairly good performance and it also supports Power Loss Protection. Unfortunately since I couldn’t use it, I had to return it.
– Swapped this out for a Solidigm P44 Pro. Has much higher performance than this drive but no PLP. Further reading I did made sense that if you have a UPS on the system with auto-shutdown enabled then PLP becomes much less of a factor. I do also keep backups of systems with DBs active on them which are the most likely thing to become corrupted with sudden power loss. So I can also restore from a backup as well if somehow the system did not correctly shut down in time from APCUPSd scripts.