Testseek.com have collected 59 expert reviews of the Patriot 2.5 inch Pyro SE Series SATA600 and the average rating is 88%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Patriot 2.5 inch Pyro SE Series SATA600.
December 2011
(88%)
59 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
-
0 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
88010059
The editors liked
Synchronous MLC NAND Flash For Utmost Performance
DuraClass™ technology
DuraWrite™ extends the endurance of SSDs
Intelligent Block Management and Wear Leveling
Intelligent Read Disturb Management
Intelligent “Recycling” for advance free space management (Garbage Collection)
RAISE™ (Redundant Array of Independent Silicon Elements)
Intelligent Data Retention optimization
3 year Warranty
Available in 60GB
120GB and 240GB capacities
SandForce SF-2281 processor with DuraClass
DuraWrite and RAISE technologies
Excellent sequential read and write speeds
SATA 6Gb/s interface
Synchronous NAND flash
Supports TRIM
SMART and NCQ
Very well
Strong Performance
Synchronous Flash Memory
SATA III
Competitive Price
Outstanding 558/528 MBps read/write speed with ATTO
TCG OPAL security with 256bit AES encryption
Uses synchronous NAND flash components
SandForce SF2281 processor supports TRIM
SMART
And RAISE
DuraWrite technology extends NAND lifetime
Enthusiastlevel operational I/O performance
3Year Patriot product warranty support
60/120/240GB highspeed SSD storage capacities
Lightweight com
Excellent sequential performance
Great 4K performance
Potential for 85K IOPS
Synchronous NAND
Super Fast Read/Write
Class-leading performance
Great performance
3 year warranty
The editors didn't like
None
HiTech Legion Editors Choice Award
Does not include a 2.5" to 3.5" adapter bracket
Not as fast when writing incompressible data
240GB version is still pricey
More Expensive Than Corsair Force GT
Faster WildFire Model Only Slightly More Expensive
Patriot previously offered a fiveyear warranty
Expensive enthusiastlevel product
Competition has cheaper models with very similar performance
Generally around this time of year we spend more time looking forward at next year's products than we do with products that are currently on the market. Blame the economy, global unrest or the Mayan Calendar if you want, but the 2012 SSD outlook is...
What can I say…I'm still caught up in the naming scheme Patriot used for the Pyro SE. Hello, would have been a more descriptive choice than SE. What the heck does SE stand for anyhow? Second Edition, Special Edition, maybe Special Equipment. My be...
Abstract: In June, 2012 we published a large group test of SSDs with capacities of 120/128 GB and 240/256 GB . Those are still the most popular sizes, judging from what people search for on Hardware.Info. The world of SSDs didn't stand still, and since then a num...
Abstract: SSD prices are dropping so quickly that it makes more and more sense to have one in your PC. 120 or 128 GB versions you can find already for £90, and for less than twice that you can buy an SSD with double the capacity. It will still take a long time be...
Good overall performance, Some improvements over original, Affordable, Good warranty period
There are none
Patriot impressed us with their original Pyro SSD and once again the feedback is only positive for the SE. The Pyro SE slots right in between the high-end Wildfire SSD and Pyro SSD – delivering the performance of Wildfire but costing much less.In most of...
Abstract: What makes one SandForce-based SSD different from the others that appear to be just like it? We round up 10 models with 60 GB of capacity to explore the effects of NAND interfaces. We also stumble across some interesting data related to full drives. Ha...
Abstract: Patriot are a brand that are getting more and more recognition lately, but still not as much as we think they should. They have started to focus more on Solid State Drives opposed to memory, and this is a good move, if you have the right products in your ...