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ADATA SU800 256GB 3D-NAND 2.5 Inch SATA III High Speed Read & Write up to 560MB/s & 520MB/s Solid State Drive (ASU800SS-256GT-C)

  • Based on 12,458 reviews
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Availability: In Stock.
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Arrives Sunday, Jun 23
Order within 16 hours and 44 minutes
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Capacity: 256GB


Style: 3D


Features

  • New generation 3D NAND technology
  • R/W up to 560/520 MB/s
  • Dynamic SLC Caching and DRAM Cache Buffer for optimized performance
  • RAID Engine & Data Shaping for ultimate protection
  • 3 Year Warranty

Description

The SU800 solid state drive lives up to its Ultimate name with 3D NAND Flash that provides higher storage density, efficiency, and reliability than traditional 2D NAND. It features intelligent SLC caching and a DRAM cache buffer to boost read/write up to 560 MB/s and 520 MB/s. Featuring LDPC ECC and technologies such as high TBW (total bytes written) and DEVSLP (Device Sleep), the Ultimate SU800 instantly upgrades notebook and desktop PCs with superior stability, durability, and power efficiency. In addition, users can download ADATA in-house developed SSD Toolbox and Migration Utility software for free to enjoy easy data management and migration.Operating temperature: 0 Degrees Celsius -70 Degrees Celsius and Storage temperature: -40 Degrees Celsius -85 Degrees Celsius.


RAM: ‎256 GB


Hard Drive: ‎256 GB


Number of USB 2.0 Ports: ‎1


Brand: ‎ADATA


Series: ‎Ulitimate SU800


Item model number: ‎ASU800SS-256GT-C


Hardware Platform: ‎PC; Mac;Linux


Operating System: ‎All


Item Weight: ‎1.6 ounces


Product Dimensions: ‎3.95 x 0.28 x 2.75 inches


Item Dimensions LxWxH: ‎3.95 x 0.28 x 2.75 inches


Number of Processors: ‎1


Computer Memory Type: ‎DDR3 SDRAM


Flash Memory Size: ‎256 GB


Hard Drive Interface: ‎Solid State


Manufacturer: ‎ADATA USA


Language: ‎English, English, English, English, English


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer: ‎No


Date First Available: ‎August 11, 2016


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Sunday, Jun 23

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • 3yr warranty, 3yr 6 month lifespan, ran perfect everyday though
Yesterday while taking a backup of the data on my Adata 512GB M.2 SSD, I got CRC check failures during validation and the backup failed and wiped most of the data it did copy as it was unable to verify the CRC on most of it. I tried a directory listing and got IO read errors, so I gave my machine a reboot and it came backup but this drive was not mounted. it did not show up in a disk listing, but the system logs showed it failed to get the expected response when querying the drive. I tried many tools in linux (fdisk, parted, smartctl, lshw, and a couple of others suggested online) and they all reported no device found, IO error, or just didn't list it, although the logs (dmesg) showed multiple IO errors and lsblk showed it was assigned /dev/sda. After a few tries with parted I was able to ignore the errors enough times that it reported creating a partition; however, after exiting, mkfs reported the partition size to be zero and parted could no longer even select the disk. We had a long run of constant action, low usage (estimated approx 6TB-8TB of write data (over 3.5 years) and a possibly 20TB+ of read, based on the stats of another m.2 installed on the same day and the data I was using was split between them, so using about 75% of the stats from the other drive as my estimated usage). I was using the disk as a "mounted" data partition for multiple docker images, the containers were not stored on this drive, only the data directories for them. I went with this SSD M.2 as I was hoping it would last longer than an NVME M.2 and was about half the price too. I do want to note I stopped using the drive 100% about 50 days ago (deleting most the data from it at the time) and yesterday was the first time I tried using it to store any data, although it didn't get that far as the drive kicked it while running an extra backup before making changes, so it was read only (besides any caching rsync may have done during replication). The drive gave good performance the entire time I used it, never an issue or hiccup until yesterday. Well worth the price, and I am glad I ran backups every 4 hours for part of its life and every 12 hours the last year. I would be willing to buy another, although at this time I am going to run without a replacement, as my performance needs are much lower that I do not need to split the data across a pair of M.2 drives. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on September 5, 2022 by Joel Perry

  • Mejor que el que tenía antes
Capacity: 512GB Style: 3D
Super rapido
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on January 3, 2023 by Oniel Diaz

  • For an older machine, you are not saving anything buying economy SSDs
Capacity: 256GB Style: 3D
For awhile now, I have been buying economy priced SSDs - mainly from Kingston and SanDisk - these are fine drives and nothing against them. However, after doing some research on YouTube and watching videos comparing specs, doing performance tests, and typical shoot-out stuff, I discovered that I am buying the wrong type of SSD. I strongly encourage you to do the same and see for yourself what all differences are, and what type might be best for you. I am not a gamer, but I do software develpment, and I make tutorial videos doing screen captures, and I use video editing software. I chose these ADATA SU800s, one for my old laptop and one for my older desktop. My desktop is a Dell 7010 with 16GB RAM, and an Intel© Core™ i5-3470 CPU @ 3.20GHz × 4 cores. It is loaded with Linux Mint 20.3 Cinnamon fully updated, and with the SanDisk SSD, my bootup time was about 18 seconds. With the ADATA SU800 with the same exact install, it is about 7 seconds. I will leave it to you to compare prices, but you will find that the ADATA SU800 is nearly the same price as the enonomy drives in the same size. I believe the difference is that ADATA uses DRAM internally for data transfer buffering to the flash storage memory, and economy SSDs I've been using use the same flash storage memory for buffering as they do for storage. Again, I encourage you to do your own research on SSDs, but for older machines like I have, ADATA makes a very noticable difference. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on March 10, 2022 by Todds Books

  • Facil de instalar
Capacity: 512GB Style: 3D
Facil de instalar em 10 min ya esta listo para usar tu equipo nuevamente
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on October 18, 2022 by christian moreno christian moreno

  • Great hard drive replacement, fast and reliable, but be sure it fits your case.
For my programming and media uses, I picked this 1TB SSD because of the speed and the fact I wanted an onboard memory/hard drive device for my raspberry PI. I find it very reliable, very responsive when retrieving documents, and I am able to do things like write programs while blasting my music, stored on the SSD (I have close to 5000 songs loaded on my card) and using the VLC player, I've created playlists where I can just leave the songs crank on my three-speaker system that was part of one of my windows PC media centers, so it has its own power source and doesn't draw it from the raspberry PI card, and right and run my own code. I've been running it now for close to three weeks nonstop as I now use my raspberry PI as my main computer, and I've had no issues with the memory card at all. I've had no lost files I've had no corrupted areas, and the SSD card comes up immediately. The only thing I wish I could've done differently, and this is due to my inexperience in Raspberry and forgetful of my UNIX days, is to properly set the card up so that my device just boots from the microSD card and everything else is stored on the SSD memory. What I wish I could've done differently was as soon as I created the first partition was to format the SSD into a 1TB partition rather than let it create thousands of partitions as I add new files and programs. No I gave this card a three star rating or ease of installation because when you look at the photo and the lack of anything in the description, it seemed like it would fit one of the cases that I purchased, but when I got it I was rudely awakened to the fact that it does not fit. So my advice to you is unless you plan to 3D print your own case, if you are used to an open air system for your raspberry PI, then this actually would be a five star installation. But be careful when trying to purchase a case to enclose this SSD card. My next raspberry PI will use the shorter SSD cards and they will fit in a double height case. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on May 27, 2019 by George McGinn

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