Micron Announces 5300 And 7300 Series Enterprise SSDs
by Billy Tallis on October 24, 2019 3:00 PM ESTAmong several announcements today, Micron is updating two families of enterprise/datacenter SSDs to use their latest 96-layer 3D TLC NAND flash memory.
SATA Update
The new 5300 series SATA drives are a replacement for the 5200 series that uses 64L 3D TLC. Micron has made a few changes to capacity and form factor options, increasing the maximum capacity available in the highest endurance tier and bringing back the M.2 options that were available with the 5100 series but missing from the 5200 series. Starting at the high end, the 5300 MAX family is the replacement for the 5200 MAX, still with a 5 DWPD endurance rating and similar performance. The 5300 MAX also adds a new 3.84TB model, but this one is only rated for 3.5 DWPD and has significantly lower random write performance.
Moving down to the PRO tier, the 5300 generation expands the capacity range to now include sizes from 240GB all the way up to 7.68TB, where the 5200 PRO only offered 960GB through 3.84TB options. The endurance ratings are a bit more consistent with the 5300 PRO series, with most models being rated for 1.5 DWPD while the 3.84TB model is rated for 1.2 DWPD and the 7.68TB model is rated for 0.6 DWPD. For comparison, the 5200 PRO series had endurance ratings from 1.3 to 2.5 DWPD depending on capacity. The 5300 PRO adds M.2 2280 models for capacities up to 1.92TB.
Micron 5300 Series Specifications Comparison | ||||
5300 Boot | 5300 PRO | 5300 MAX | ||
Form Factor | M.2 2280 | 2.5" and M.2 2280 | 2.5" | |
Capacities | 240 GB | 240 GB 480 GB 960 GB 1.92 TB 3.84 TB (2.5" only) 7.68 TB (2.5" only) |
240 GB 480 GB 960 GB 1.92 TB 3.84 TB |
|
Interface | SATA 6Gb/s | |||
NAND | Micron 96-layer 3D TLC | |||
Sequential Read | 540 MB/s | |||
Sequential Write | 220 MB/s | 310–520 MB/s | 380–520 MB/s | |
4KB Random Read | 50k IOPS | 67k–95k IOPS | 82k–95k IOPS | |
4KB Random Write | 12k IOPS | 11k–40k IOPS | 34k–75k IOPS | |
Write Endurance | 1.0 DWPD | 0.6–1.5 DWPD | 3.5–5.0 DWPD | |
Warranty | 5 years |
There isn't (yet?) a 5300 ECO tier to serve as a direct replacement for the 5200 ECO drives (~1 DWPD), but the 5300 PRO tier is now broad enough to mostly cover this market with slightly higher endurance ratings. The 5300 series does add a new Micron 5300 Boot model rated for 1 DWPD, available only with 240GB capacity and only in the M.2 form factor. No replacement for the 5210 ION QLC-based SATA drives has been announced yet.
Low-power NVMe is back
Micron is bringing back their low-power NVMe product family with the new 7300 series, successor to the 7100 series introduced in 2016 and abandoned in their transition to 3D NAND. The 7300 family includes 2.5"/7mm U.2 drives and M.2 drives in both 80mm and 110mm lengths. The U.2 drives offer higher capacities, and higher performance due to their 12W power limit compared to 8.25W for the M.2 drives. The high-endurance 7300 MAX series offers capacities from 400GB to 6.4TB and endurance ratings of 3.0-4.2 DWPD. The 7300 PRO series uses less overprovisioning to offer capacities from 480GB to 7.68TB with endurance ratings of 1.1-1.6 DWPD.
Micron 7300 Series Specifications Comparison | |||||
7300 PRO | 7300 MAX | ||||
Form Factor | 2.5" 7mm U.2 | M.2 2280 or M.2 22100 |
2.5" 7mm U.2 | M.2 2280 | |
Capacities | 960 GB 1.92 TB 3.84 TB 7.68 TB |
480 GB (80mm) 960 GB (80mm) 1.92 TB (110mm) 3.84 TB (110mm) |
800 GB 1.6 TB 3.2 TB 6.4 TB |
400 GB 800 GB |
|
Interface | NVMe, PCIe 3 x4 (dual-port x2+x2 capable) | ||||
NAND | Micron 96-layer 3D TLC | ||||
Sequential Read | 2.4–3.0 GB/s | 1.3–3.0 GB/s | 2.4–3.0 GB/s | 1.3–2.4 GB/s | |
Sequential Write | 700–1800 MB/s | 400–1000 MB/s | 700–1900 MB/s | 400–700 MB/s | |
4KB Random Read | 220k–520k IOPS | 50k–396k IOPS | 220k–520k IOPS | 90k–220k IOPS | |
4KB Random Write | 30k–85k IOPS | 15k–70k IOPS | 60k–140k IOPS | 30k–60k IOPS | |
Write Endurance | 1.1–1.6 DWPD | 1.1–1.4 DWPD | 3.1–4.2 DWPD | 3.0–3.1 DWPD | |
Warranty | 5 years |
The Micron 7300 series is an alternative to the 9300 series NVMe drives that were introduced earlier this year. The 9300 series offers higher capacities and higher performance, but uses the thicker 15mm U.2 form factor, draws significantly more power (21W max vs 12W max for the 7300), and the 9300 series is still on 64L TLC rather than 96L TLC.
2 Comments
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ikjadoon - Thursday, October 24, 2019 - link
These drives are great for NAS systems, too. Beats the pants out of Samsung's ridiculously out-of-touch pricing & endurance ratings. If you've got a use case and the $$$, Micron's enterprise SSDs are quite possibly my favorite NAS SSDs in a write-intensive environment.We dropped a few 5200 PRO's in a DS918+ from Synology and they've worked like a charm.
schujj07 - Friday, October 25, 2019 - link
The 9300's are really nice in DataCore SANSymphony as well.