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Crucial P5 1TB 3D NAND NVMe Internal Gaming SSD, up to 3400MB/s - CT1000P5SSD8

  • Based on 9,338 reviews
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Availability: Only 1 left in stock, order soon!
Fulfilled by Amazon

Arrives Saturday, Sep 13
Order within 11 hours and 24 minutes
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Capacity: 1 TB


Features

  • Innovative 3D NAND and cutting-edge controller technology with read/write performance up to 3400/3000MB/s and random read/write 390K/500K IOPS, pushing the limits of PCIe Gen 3 NVMe for tech enthusiasts, professional designers, and serious gamers
  • Capable of enhancing data security and management with rapid, full-drive encryption, helping protect your data without performance degradation
  • Optimize performance and durability with dynamic write acceleration, error correction, and adaptive thermal protection
  • Operating systems open almost instantly, apps launch in seconds, and games load before youre ready to spawn
  • Backed by a limited 5-year warranty or up to the max endurance rating of 600TBW

Description

Expand system performance with NVMe technology. The Crucial P5 SSD delivers powerful speed and data protection with sequential reads up to 3400MB/s, along with exceptional Crucial support. Advanced features like Dynamic Write Acceleration, full hardware-based encryption, and Adaptive Thermal Protection provide data security and enhanced system reliability. With thousands of validation hours, dozens of qualification tests, and a 5-year limited , the Crucial P5 SSD is backed by world-class Micron engineering and innovation.


Hard Drive: ‎1 TB Internal Solid State Drive


Brand: ‎Crucial


Series: ‎Crucial P5 SSD


Item model number: ‎CT1000P5SSD8


Hardware Platform: ‎PC, Linux, Mac


Item Weight: ‎0.7 ounces


Product Dimensions: ‎3.14 x 0.08 x 0.86 inches


Item Dimensions LxWxH: ‎3.14 x 0.08 x 0.86 inches


Processor Count: ‎1


Flash Memory Size: ‎1 GB


Hard Drive Interface: ‎NVMe


Batteries: ‎1 Unknown batteries required.


Manufacturer: ‎Crucial


Language: ‎English, English


Date First Available: ‎June 30, 2020


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Saturday, Sep 13

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


  • You Do Not Know What You Are Missing UNTIL You Add This To Your Computer
Capacity: 500 GB
The Crucial P5 500GB HD (3400/3000MB/s) did what was asked and more. It definitely made our office HP 15-cs3073cl laptops all around better performing. It is a really decent laptop, but the hard drives (1TB 5400rpms are garbage). It was an easy way (cost efficient as well) to upgrade a our laptops (that supports NVME M.2 with a M Key - the little slit on its end. There are B keys, M Keys and B/M Keys on different M.2s) so you are way ahead of most admin/staff laptops in school districts. Now, I have this super fast Crucial HD as my main hard drive and the old 1Tb 5400rpm HD as by back up. This is great because I have speed and still space to store pictures and videos, etc.. So, if you have a laptop and it can use a MVME M.2 HD w/ a M-Key, do not hesitate to purchase this one. A+ Product. UserBenchmarks: Crucial's P5 500gb M.2 got a score = 258% (exceptional.) My WD Black SN750 NVMe PCIe M.2 1TB got a 283% (exceptional.) My Samsung 860 Evo 500GB got a 118% (Outstanding). My WD Blue 1TB (2012 - 102% Outstanding. The original HP15 WD WD10SPZX-00HKTT0 (5400rpm) got a 61.7% (Good...BUT IT IS SO SLOW next to a SSD or M.2.) If this was a grading scale...a 61.7% is not good it is barely passing in education. Plus, it is really easy to see the difference. Startups, downloads, and updates take FOREVER on the the 5400rpm HD. If you have never updated your drive...then you do not know what you are missing. Just saying.... Side note: This is the easiest area to cut costs when purchasing a laptop/computer and EASIEST way to update it on a budget and still save money in laptops and computers. Ram is another area. Crucial makes both. Latops - you typically can't upgrade much other than the HD and RAM. Most higher end laptops have some wiggle room, but not in all cases. When you buy it...if they give you "upgrade options"...then you know where you can add or subtract down the road. Keep in mind that in some cases they even solder the RAM to the board - which makes it difficult to do much there. To Clone: Crucial makes it easy. All you have to do is... (You must have a M.2 connection and a SATA connection. At least one of each to do the following. Otherwise, you will need to search online on how to clone your hard drive with what your present setup looks like.) Most laptops and computers have at least 2 connections. One may be M.2. If it is not, then do not but this hard drive. You can use my directions below, but not with this hard drive. 1.Download the Software and Install it: Acronis True Image for Crucial (other brands have the same thing also) - do a search Crucial Clone Software. 2. Install the new hard drive. DO NOT REMOVE your old hard drive at this time. Please leave your old one in as your MAIN still. Let it boot up. 3. Find your NEW HD. It can be found by running DISK MANAGEMENT on your computer and formatting your new drive to add it to your computer. (It should be found under "THIS PC" shortcut on Win10. 4. Make sure your new hard drive is the same size or larger than your old one. (Remove some programs that are easily reinstalled - like video games if you need a little space.) You want to CLONE everything over to the new one. I went from 500gb to 500gb...the amount moving over was smaller than the new empty hard drive. I deleted a couple of video games too - off the record of course. :) 5. Start Acronis software and Clone (under tools) your old one onto the new one. If the old one is a 5400rpm HD...go eat lunch or dinner. You will have some time. Our 500gb - 5400rpm HDs took about 30-45mins. A 500bg 2.5 SSD - 10 minutes max from start to finish. 6. Once it is cloned, turn off your computer and either disconnect the SATA connection or take out your old hard drive. Start up your computer and it will find the new hard drive. If the process results in a corrupt set of files on boot, I did not mess with it. I reinstalled my old one and booted from it and formatted the new drive and started over. (I was not wasting time "fixing" a fresh CLONE. Who was to say other errors might not show up later?) I wanted to be safe versus sorry. Shortcuts get me in trouble sometimes. 7. Once you are ready to boot form the new drive, disconnect the old one again. If it boots, then it should be your main one now for booting. 8. You can shut it down and reconnect or install the old one and it should be your backup drive now. Go to "THIS PC" and see which one is your "C" and which is your "D". If it is not correct, you should have noticed the load up time in the beginning was ridiculous if using the 5400rpm and/or it is labeled as "C". How do know which is which? Well, once I clone my original drive, I delete something off of it to make it smaller. Secondly, I look at the total sizes. Typically those are not identical. In my case, one is 464gb and the other is 931gb. Pretty easy for me to tell them apart.) 9. If everything worked out and the M.2 is now your main drive, then you are good to go! Enjoy. 10. If it did not work, then you will need to shut your computer down and go into your bios. If you do not know how to get into it...look it up. Some are f2, others are f8 or F12 and mine was F10. 11. Hold the specific F-key down when you restart it and enter the bios. You will need to change the HD boot order. It needs to be your M.2 first and then the other drive. Save your progress and restart. 12. Check how fast it starts up. Then check "This PC" if it is correct, then all is well. 13. If it is not...then you probably did not save your work when you entered the bios. Try that again. 14. Most of this can be found on the internet as well. Best of luck. THANK YOU, CRUCIAL for making my upgrade EASY. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on January 4, 2021 by Rugby Hawk

  • Good storage
Capacity: 1 TB
Used to expand the storage on our computer for gaming
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on November 24, 2022 by Racheal

  • 1TB
Capacity: 1 TB
Fast
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on October 31, 2022 by Homey DaClown

  • "Up to" is Accurate
Capacity: 2 TB
I decided I'd given Samsung enough of my money and decided to pick this up in 2TB for a gaming drive. I'm not angry, just a little disappointed that I happened upon a drive that advertised such a dramatic difference. The price was slashed by almost half, I paid about $150 for an NVMe that has about 15% less potential bandwidth than the *maximum* advertised bandwidth. It was an objectively good buy factoring in the discount I received and I would assume the seller knows this is happening and adjusted the price as a result; I just feel like I didn't get the deal I was advertised. Turns out some other companies like Kingston, PNY, and Adata got caught with their pants down in the past selling SSDs with chips different than what was sent to editors and launch buyers. So just like with RAM kits, watch your vendors and roll the dice when the price is right. Lesson learned. Reality is crystal disk scores don't matter *that* much, PC mark says it performs about like other drives I've bought. We'll see what the longevity is like and that's my biggest concern with lower bin chips. Tl;dr this product is a dice roll, get it on a big sale to be safe. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on May 20, 2022 by Kevin

  • Works well for writing Blue Iris camera video
Capacity: 2 TB
Using this drive (my first M.2 drive) to manage the videos captured by Blue Iris Security software. The SATA drive I was using lagged a bit when the software was trying to write video from three different cameras at the same time. This M.2 drive writes 5 times faster and has no issues with pretty much anything I throw at it. Yes, there are faster M.2 drives but for the great price I paid for this drive, I'm very happy. Comes with a 5 year warranty. I have four Crucial SATA drives and have used them for years and no problems. I trust Crucial and put them in the same reliability category as Samsung. The drive was very easy to install (physically) and I used Macrium Free imaging software to copy the OS from the existing drive to the new M.2 drive. Easy peasy. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on May 26, 2022 by soaknewe (so can you)

  • Fast and Reliable
Capacity: 2 TB
Bought this drive as a fast access storage drive for video games that require a lot of disk use. At time of review I’ve had it in use for 6 months, great speed and reliability so far. This is my first crucial purchase and I’d definitely do it again.
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on August 5, 2022 by Anthony

  • Great SSD but does not wake up from sleep with Linux
Capacity: 1 TB
Honestly, after a couple of months and a couple of Linux kernel upgrades, this particular NVME SSD does not seem to work with Linux OSes. I was using it in the Framework laptop running Ubuntu 21.10, latest kernel 15.16 and but my OS did not wake up after sleep. This is the only key issue I had with this. For some reason, if your linux OS goes to sleep, it will have trouble waking up as it will not detect the SSD anymore requiring a hard reboot. This is also a well-reported issue within Framework, but it might be possible it affects other brands as well - as of the time of this writing there are no firmware updates on crucial's website either. I have had to resort to the WD SN series and that fixed the sleep issue. Outside of this setback, your mileage may be better. Currently putting this in my PC Windows gaming desktop as extra storage instead. Overall good but not perfect for my situation. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on January 16, 2022 by Ivan Diaz

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