In its review from two years ago, it was compared to different drives. In these benches the SN750 also has the latest firmware and was set to Game Mode in WD SSD Dashboard for better performance (disables lower power states). Where did these numbers come from?Nothing is wrong with the SN750 other than its architecture being a little laggy compared to the latest SSDs on the market. It shouldn't be behind the SN550 in almost any metric on the sole review, yet all the comparison reviews show it as a very bad drive. Salgado18 said:Isn't there something wrong with the Black SN750? In these benchmarks it looks like one of the worst tested, but in the sole review it is one of the two best PCIe 3.0 on the market. The 1TB model is the top performer of the series and can deliver up to 460,000/450,000 random read/write IOPS. The SN570 leverages a small, quick-to-recover static cache to dish out sequential speeds of up to 3.5/3.0 GBps read/write. While the WD Blue uses a new type of flash, the SLC cache implementation hasn’t changed. At roughly $90-100, the 1TB model is the best deal at the time of writing. The 250GB SN570 has an awkwardly high $50 price tag, making the 500GB model the much more attractive option. The WD Blue SN570 is currently available in 250GB, 500GB, 1TB capacities, but WD plans to release a 2TB model in 2022.
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