Отзывы о Карта памяти Kingston Canvas Select Plus microSD
6520 отзывов пользователей o Kingston Canvas Select Plus microSD
Пользовались
Kingston Canvas Select Plus microSD?
Поделитесь своим опытом и помогите другим сделать правильный выбор











Pros:
Very Light Weight (feels like a biscuit, wanted to bite!) than my HDD (WD Black).
Thin than my HDD (WD Black).
Easy to install in my laptop.
Can be partitioned in GPT format (for UEFI BIOS).
Faster Booting of Windows compare to my HDD (WD Black), total boot time on HDD was ~3Min now its ~40 Seconds.
Faster Opening of Applications.
For regular operation gets descent copying speed from 2MB-90MB/Sec.
SOLVED FREQUENT HANGING PROBLEM PROBLEM OF MY LAPPY (ThinkPad E460).
Cons:
Poor speed while installing windows 10 Pro (1809) compare to my HDD (WD Black), took ~28 minutes (6th Gen i7 2.6Ghz / 16GB RAM), on HDD it was ~15 minutes.
Poor copying speed from SSD to USB, ~2-3MB/Sec., On my HDD (WD Black) it was ~2-5MB/Sec.
Poor copying speed from Phone to SSD, takes longer time to copy content of phone (S9 128GB) to SSD compare to my HDD (WD Black).
THE POOR COPYING SPEED MAY BE BECAUSE OF PARTITIONING OF SSD (Mentioned in most of the forums) OR BECAUSE IT HAVE DUAL CHANNEL CONTROLLER.
But when I compare the price paid for the product, I don't regret the buy.

I m facing slow boot-up issue.
After upgrading HHD to SSD my laptop turnon within 10-15 sec. No lag after login.
Those who have 4gb ram with win10 i personally suggest this drive.
SSD can improve ur pc app loading time but for heavy app u should also upgrade RAM.

TLC (Triple level cell): Single NAND cell can store 3 bits, therefore SSD will be cheaper, slower and deteriorate faster but will have higher capacity in similarly dense SLC/MLC SSDs. (You don't need to worry about SSD wear, this SSD is rated for at least 1 million hours MTBF.
Dual channel controller: Basically two concurrent streams of data querying capacity.
DRAM cache: High speed memory embedded on SSD to speedup access time of frequently accessed files.
Kingston SA400 is a TLC Dual Controller Single Core (Phison PS3111-S11, last gen's most popular controller) SSD with no DRAM cache, pretty much the cheapest SSD can go.
Therefore it is slower and dumber as compared to Samsung 860 EVO, Kingston UV500, Crucial MX500. But it's also extremely cheaper.
The attached image shows the read and write speed of the SSD but these numbers are mostly misleading. If you are going for a SSD just to speed up the overall experience and snappiness of the OS, you should be looking for 4KB Queue depth of 1 and single threaded workload's read and write speed because that's the most common work load.
Now, a typical 5400 RPM HDD will have 4KiB Q1T1 speeds around 0.5 MiBPS read and 1.5 MiBPS write whereas you can see in the image that this SSD has ~35 MiBPS read and ~82 MiBPS write which is exponentially faster than HDD.
So, going with this SDD will have an exponential increase in speed as compared to HDD, while going for MLC/SLC SSD with DRAM cache and dual channel controller will have marginal increase in speed as compared to this SSD but a much more increase in cost.
Therefore, if you are tight on budget, go with this SSD without a doubt. But, if you have a specialized workload that can take advantage of higher queue depth speeds, multi threaded performance or sequential speeds and you have no issue in spending the extra money then go for more expensive ones. But, I would suggest to go with extremely high performing SSD like NVMe ones that directly communicate with the CPU using PCIe lanes, if you really want something above SA400.



If Amazon cannot provide warranty for the products sold, they may as well stop selling them,
Coming to the product it seems to be getting very hot. Reaching 60~61.c upon load. Idles at roughly 55.c which seems a little high.



so iam little bit dispointed to this result and kingston quality control issues


Open application wasn't easy never before...
macrium reflect help me to copy windows 10 directly to my SSD...super simple...totally worth it...
Boot up time is 10 sec in my case...
Using it as drive C with 1 TB HDD for my games and media

The SSD has all features as mentioned. It's metallic body, maintains the temperature and does not allow it to overheat. Use another tool called speccy to monitor the system temp, specs and issues.
Thanks Amazon, though the first one didn't work, the replacement works perfect.

The most important aspect of an SSD is not speed or life expectancy. Almost all SSDs available in the market have read speeds hovering between 450 to 550 Mb/s and write speeds from 350 to 500 Mbps making all of them 5 (sequential) to 500 (random) times faster than any mechanical hard disk. This one is no exception. Almost all SSDs have a life expectancy (MTBF) of 1-2 million hours which is 110 to 220 years and this one is no different either.
But all SSDs have another limitation which is not much publicized, and that is.... endurance. If you write and erase too much data on an SSD continously, its NVRAM cells start to fail. There is always a limitation how much data can be written on an SSD and how many times. That is endurance, and it's expressed in TBW or "total bytes written" with an unit in Terabytes or TB. For this Kingston model, its TBW is very low - just 80 TB. Though in a practical world, 80 TB is a lot of data and if you keep writing 50GB of data per day, this SSD will still last for more than 4 years, but there are other more expensive brands and models which offer several times more endurance. A screenshot of the datasheet for this model from Kingston's own website is attached with this review.
Why did I buy this SSD if better models are available at a higher price? It's because I am using it in an old laptop which is not in a great condition. For me, a life of 2 to 3 years will be more than enough, so I wanted to spend as little as possible. But if you have a premium system, go for better models, for example Kingston KC600 which has almost double the endurance compared to this one.
