Testseek.com have collected 135 expert reviews of the Intel 750 Series NVMe PCIe and the average rating is 90%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Intel 750 Series NVMe PCIe.
April 2015
(90%)
135 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
(92%)
1962 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
900100135
The editors liked
Incredible performance
fastest client drive (overall) to date
Reasonably priced
Power-loss data protection
Fastest Consumer PCIe SSD Yet
No SATA Bottleneck
5Year Warranty
Competitive Pricing
Superb bandwidth and performance
Very easy to setup and manage
Highly compatible
The SSD 750 800GB offers high performance and largecapacity storage that you can't get in another NVMebased product (other than the 1.2TB model). This is the drive that we asked for from the start of this series
And it delivers just about everywhere.
By far the fastest consumer SSD available
First consumer-focused drive with NVMe interface
Reasonably priced per gigabyte
Given performance and capacity
Available in add-in card and 2.5-inch form factors
Fastest consumer-grade storage. Blazing throughput via a new NVMe interface. PCIe and 2.5-inch form factors.
Silky smooth operation as system drives
Outstanding sequential reading and writing performance
Even at very low queue depths
Outstanding 4K random writing performance
At low and high queue depths
Outstanding 4k random reading performance at very l
Epic performance
Insane sequential transfer speeds
NVMe for minimized latency
5 year warranty
Compact. Low-profile
Half-length
Blistering fast
Fastest
The editors didn't like
Limited system support for the 2.5” form factor
Not compatible with many legacy X79 and Z87 platforms as a boot drive
Premium Price
No current plans for less expensive solutions
It's difficult to attack Intel on the price
Since this drive is so advanced and requires so many components. It does sell for $1 per gigabyte
And that can be hard to swallow for some.
2.5-inch drive requires clunky adapter to connect to M.2 slot
Only recent Intel chipsets officially supported
And most boards require a BIOS update
No midrange capacity
Some SATA drives offer better rated endurance
Longer warranties
Bottom Line
It will require a bit of updating and possibly a tricky installation to use it in your DIY desktop
But the Intel SSD 750 Series is the fastest consumer-level solid-state drive around
Price. The Intel 750 NVMe SSD is expensive
A little bit slow to boot Windows 8.1
High price per gigabyte
Low performance per dollar
Booting Windows 7 not supported
Blocks CrossFire/SLI on Z97 platform
Low MySQL Enterprise performance
Possible performance drops when working with small data. Expensive. Potential compatibility issues with older X79 and Z87 platforms.
The Intel 750 Series in its 2.5″ U.2 form, “the cabled NVMe solution” brings you all the performance of the M.2 SSD, but in a 2.5″ 15mm size. The 750 in this form factor comes with either a U.2 to SAS and M.2 to SAS cables so it will work in any mother...
Published: 2016-04-21, Author: Chris , review by: tomshardware.com
The SSD 750 800GB offers high performance and largecapacity storage that you can't get in another NVMebased product (other than the 1.2TB model). This is the drive that we asked for from the start of this series, and it delivers just about everywhere.
It's difficult to attack Intel on the price, since this drive is so advanced and requires so many components. It does sell for $1 per gigabyte, and that can be hard to swallow for some.
For workstation users, the Intel SSD 750 series is a perfect mix of performance, cost and features. This is a true enterprise part that is targeted at workstation users, but it's affordable enough for power users and enthusiasts. The 800GB model fills t...
As we mentioned at the beginning of this article, it is important to keep in mind that the Intel SSD 750 Series 1.2 TiB and the Kingston HyperX Predator 480 GiB are not direct competitors. Even while both of them use a PCI Express x4 interface, they have...
Abstract: Since the first consumer SSDs hit our PCs, they've been piggy-backing highlatency mechanical drive tech in terms of their interfaces and protocols. In the beginning of the SSD revolution, running across the 600MB/s limit of the SATA 6Gb/s interface wasn't...
Silky smooth operation as system drives, Outstanding sequential reading and writing performance, even at very low queue depths, Outstanding 4K random writing performance, at low and high queue depths, Outstanding 4k random reading performance at very l
Price. The Intel 750 NVMe SSD is expensive, A little bit slow to boot Windows 8.1
Let us summarise the most important positive and negative points belowPositiveSilky smooth operation as system drives.Outstanding sequential reading and writing performance, even at very low queue depths.Outstanding 4K random writing performance, at low a...
Published: 2015-06-23, Author: Sean , review by: thessdreview.com
The 400GB Intel 750 offers up some great performance reaching 2.4GB/s read and 1GB/s write speeds in our tests. It's NVMe interface allows it to reach up to 450K/250K IOPS read/write and it is backed by Intel with a 5-year warranty. If you are in the mar...
Published: 2015-05-27, Author: Joel , review by: pcmag.com
Fastest consumer-grade storage. Blazing throughput via a new NVMe interface. PCIe and 2.5-inch form factors.
Bottom Line, It will require a bit of updating and possibly a tricky installation to use it in your DIY desktop, but the Intel SSD 750 Series is the fastest consumer-level solid-state drive around
It will require a bit of updating and possibly a tricky installation to use it in your DIY desktop, but the Intel SSD 750 Series is the fastest consumer-level solid-state drive around...
The Intel SSD 750 400GB is the lowest priced product in this new ultra high performance SSD category. The $400 price point brings the cost of entry down but NVMe still has compatibility limitations that need to be considered. Workstation users will fi...
Published: 2015-05-12, Author: Steven , review by: techspot.com
Abstract: It's been quite some time since our last SSD roundup and we hadn't seen much need for one until recently. SSD technology grew stale after saturating the SATA 6Gb/s bus, bringing mostly minor improvements in recent memory and making up for it with price cu...