Western Digital Announces SanDisk Skyhawk Enterprise NVMe SSDs
by Billy Tallis on February 7, 2017 10:00 PM EST- Posted in
- SSDs
- Storage
- Western Digital
- SanDisk
- Enterprise SSDs
- NVMe
Today Western Digital announced the first enterprise NVMe SSDs under their SanDisk brand. The new SanDisk Skyhawk series are 2.5" U.2 SSDs intended for datacenter use. While Western Digital's HGST division already has NVMe SSDs like the Ultrastar SN200 series and their consumer-oriented WD brand recently added the WD Black M.2 NVMe SSD, SanDisk's previous PCIe SSDs have been based on their proprietary Fusion-IO architecture.
The SanDisk Skyhawk series includes 2TB and 4TB class drives. The standard Skyhawk models have usable capacities of 1920GB and 3840GB, while the Skyhawk Ultra models reserve more spare area and offer usable capacities of 1600GB and 3200GB. All four SKUs are based on a common platform with an unspecified PCIe 3.0 NVMe 1.2 controller. Performance and power consumption ratings are substantially lower than the HGST Ultrastar SN200 series, which use Microsemi's Flashtec controllers and draw up to 25 W compared to just 10.5 W average and 12 W maximum for the Skyhawk. The SanDisk Skyhawk SSDs do not support the U.2 dual-port mode that top of the line enterprise SSDs like the HGST Ultrastar SN200 and Intel SSD DC D3600 and D3700 are capable of using, but otherwise the SanDisk Skyhawk has the usual features expected of a datacenter SSD.
Series Specifications | |||||
Skyhawk | Skyhawk Ultra | ||||
Capacities | 1,920 GB | 3,840 GB | 1,600 GB | 3,200 GB | |
Form Factor | 2.5"/15mm U.2 | ||||
Interface | PCIe 3.0 x4 (NVMe 1.2) | ||||
Controller | unspecified | ||||
NAND | 15nm MLC | ||||
Sequential Read (128 kB QD128) | up to 1500 MB/s | up to 1700 MB/s | |||
Sequential Write (128 kB QD128) | up to 1170 MB/s | up to 1200 MB/s | |||
Random Read (4 kB QD128) IOPS | up to 250k IOPS | up to 250k IOPS | |||
Random Write (4 kB QD128) IOPS | up to 47k IOPS | up to 83k IOPS | |||
Mixed Random Read/Write ( 70%R/30%W, 4kB QD128) |
up to 99k IOPS | up to 150k IOPS | |||
Average Random Read Latency (4kB QD32) | 128 µs | 127 µs | 125 µs | 126 µs | |
Average Random Write Latency (4kB QD32) | 718 µs | 1331 µs | 351 µs | 693 µs | |
Power | Idle | 5.6 W | |||
Operating | 10.5 W | ||||
Endurance | 0.6 DWPD | 0.5 DWPD | 1.7 DWPD | 1.2 DWPD | |
Encryption | None | ||||
Power Loss Protection | Full in-flight data protection | ||||
MTBF | 2 million hours | ||||
Warranty | 5 years |
Pricing for the SanDisk Skyhawk SSDs has not been announced. The drives are currently sampling to select OEMs and will be generally available in Q2.
Source: SanDisk
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creed3020 - Wednesday, February 8, 2017 - link
Sequential speeds look low for an NVMe drive, especially one with so much capacity so there isn't a reason why the controller cannot max out its channels to the available NAND.Also why re-use the same branding as Seagate HDDs....I realize the overlap between DC SSDs and Surveillance hard drives isn't clear but surprised anyways.
MrSpadge - Wednesday, February 8, 2017 - link
Apparently they ran out of fancy bird names.ddriver - Wednesday, February 8, 2017 - link
It has gotten quite lame, but hey, their marketing people know what impresses the idiots. Silly marketing is a reflection of silly consumers.aIIergen - Sunday, February 12, 2017 - link
skyhawk is a brand name of all-flash-array developped by skyera inc. which is bought by HGST some years ago. this means its monikar as storage brand(2012) by far predates seagate product(2016).