yitit
Home
/
Computing
/
Seagate’s rolls out the fastest SSD ever, and it’s ready for production
Seagate’s rolls out the fastest SSD ever, and it’s ready for production-February 2024
Feb 11, 2026 11:24 PM

  Image used with permission by copyright holderIn the burgeoning world of solid state drives, speed is king, and every new advancement in the technology has focused on increasing that speed, either in terms of connectivity or actual drive performance. Now it looks like Seagate is doing both, harnessing the power of 16-lane PCIe and NVMe for a drive that can push 10 gigabytes of data per second, which the company says is the fastest ever in a drive.

  According to Seagate, that score is 4GB/s faster than the previous record for a production SSD. And that’s not all that’s impressive about the the drive. The speedy unit also meets the specifications laid out by the Open Compute Project, allowing for a high level of compatibility across data centers and enterprise applications.

  Recommended Videos

  Traditional eSATA SSDs, like those found in most PCs, are limited by the protocol to around 500 megabytes per second, even if the flash could theoretically be written and read faster. PCIe has an order of magnitude higher theoretical speeds, which has allowed users to pump NVMe drives to their full potential. In our own tests, we’ve found these drives reaching almost 1.5 GB/s on a good day.

  Related

  It’s time to stop trying to play games without an SSD SK Hynix might dethrone Western Digital with this SSD NVMe vs. SSD: What’s the difference?

  If that 10 GB/s speed seems like overkill, Seagate is also preparing an eight-lane version of the same drive. It’s still capable of 6.7 GB/s, a record speed for its own class, and plenty fast for almost any use. It’s designed for companies that aren’t quite ready to support the full deal, either in terms of budget or power.

  Perhaps best of all, Seagate’s powerful new SSDs are actually production-ready, and will be rolling out in greater numbers starting this summer. That doesn’t mean you’ll start seeing it pop up in gaming rigs – far from it – but technology like this does tend to trickle down eventually. It’s also wise to expect an exorbitant price tag for the privilege, one that will weed out all but the most serious data-minded companies, although no word on exactly what that number will look like.

Comments
Welcome to yitit comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Login to display more comments
Computing
Recent News
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.yitit.com All Rights Reserved