A New Challenger Appears: Palit's Own-Brand UVS and GFS SSDs Announced
by Anton Shilov on April 3, 2017 11:00 AM ESTPalit has announced two families of SSDs that it plans to sell under its own brand. The new drives are aimed at entry-level and mainstream gaming PCs, and will be based on controllers from Phison using 3D MLC or 3D TLC NAND flash memory from Micron depending on which drive you pick up. The Palit SSDs will be among the first drives on the market that will use a combination of a Phison controller and 3D NAND memory ICs from Micron, but we expect this combination to spread across several SSD vendors in due course.
Palit Microsystems is one of the world’s largest producers of graphics cards, but it is not entirely new to SSDs too. Palit’s GALAX and KFA2 brands have offered Phison-based SSDs for quite a while, but their lineups have never been large and the whole effort looked more like a brand development rather than an attempt to compete against much of the market. This time, Palit has announced two families of SSDs under its own trademark and with seven drives in total, it plans to address entry-level and mainstream gaming PCs. We do not know Palit’s plans in regards of higher-end drives in M.2 or add-in-card form-factors, but such products are available from other brands that Palit owns and it should not be a problem for the company to expand its own lineup if it needs to.
Palit will initially offer two families of SSDs: First is the Palit UVS family, featuring the Phison S3111-S11 controller and 3D TLC memory for entry-level gaming systems. Then second is the Palit GFS family, based on the same Phison S3111-S11 controller but with 3D MLC NAND flash.
Phison PS3111-S11 Controller Specifications | ||||
PS3111-S11 | ||||
Interface | SATA 3.2 | |||
NAND Channels | 2 | |||
CE Targets | 16 | |||
DRAM Cache | Supported | |||
ECC | LDPC | |||
Supported Capacities | MLC | Up to 1 TB | ||
TLC | 128 GB, 256 GB, 512 GB, 1 TB | |||
Supported NAND | Toshiba 15 nm MLC/TLC SK Hynix 14 nm MLC/TLC Micron L06/B0KB 3D NAND NAND flash memory with 8KB and 16KB blocks. |
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Additional Features | Data Compression End to End Data Path Protection |
Before we start discussing the drives, let’s talk a little bit about the controller itself. Formally, the PS3111-S11 is positioned below the S10 because it has only two NAND channels with 16 CE targets and physically cannot deliver breakthrough performance. As it is a SATA controller, the PS3111-S11 does not have to deliver anything sequentially higher than 550 MB/s and this is something it can do with both MLC and TLC chips (sustained performance is a different comparison). The most important advancement of the controller versus its predecessors is that the PS3111-S11 supports LDPC ECC, and thus can be enabled on SSDs with sufficient endurance. Additionally, the PS3111-S11 supports 3D and 1z MLC/TLC NAND flash and memory with large (8 KB and 16 KB) blocks.
As for the drives, the Palit UVS family will include 120 GB, 256 GB, 480 GB and 512 GB models using 3D TLC NAND (except the 120GB, which is planar TLC). Depending on the model, the drives are rated to deliver up to 560 MB/s sequential read speed and up to 470 MB/s (370 MB/s for the 120 GB version) sequential write speed. As for random performance, the numbers on the box give 72,500 read IOPS and up to 85,000 write IOPS.
The Palit GFS lineup consists of three drives with 120 GB, 128 GB and 240 GB capacities all based on 3D MLC and offering all the endurance-related benefits of such memory. From a performance point of view, the GFS SSDs are slightly faster than the UVS drives: they are rated for up to 560 MB/s sequential read speed and up to 480 MB/s sequential write speed. Palit also states they can also perform up to 75,000 read IOPS and up to 87,500 write IOPS (240 GB version only). Palit may decide to expand the GFS lineup with higher-capacity offerings over time, but right now, its premium drives only offer entry-level capacities.
Palit UVS and GFS SSDs Specifications | |||||||
UVS | GFS | ||||||
UVS10AT-SSD120 | UVS-SSD256 | UVS-SSD480 | UVS-SSD512 | GFS-SSD120 | GFS-SSD128 | GFS-SSD240 | |
Capacity | 120 GB | 256 GB | 480 GB | 512 GB | 120 GB | 128 GB | 240 GB |
Controller | Phison S3111-S11 | ||||||
NAND Flash | TLC | 3D TLC NAND | 3D MLC NAND | ||||
Sequential Read (max) | 560 MB/s | 525 MB/s | 540 MB/s | 560 MB/s | |||
Sequential Write (max) | 375 MB/s | 470 MB/s | 465 MB/s | 450 MB/s | 480 MB/s | ||
Random Read IOPS (max) | 70.0K | 67.5K | 72.5K | 47.5K | 75.0K | ||
Random Write IOPS (max) | 77.5K | 85K | 87.5K | ||||
DRAM Buffer | 32 MB | ||||||
Pseudo-SLC Caching | Supported | ||||||
Power Management | DevSleep 5mW | ||||||
Form-Factor, Interface | 2.5"/7 mm, Serial ATA 3.2 | ||||||
Warranty | 3 years |
There are two intrigues about Palit’s SSDs: the memory supplier and actual manufacturer. Typically, Phison ships its controllers with memory and firmware and in many cases even provides assembly and test services (essentially, shipping already made drives). Despite this, Palit has enough SMT lines and can produce virtually everything itself. At present, we do not know whether Palit-branded SSDs are made by Palit, or are manufactured by a third party, but the latter is clearly a possibility here.
The supplier of the NAND is also not obvious and could come from different sources. Palit does not disclose who is their supplier, but it is worth noting that Phison usually ships its controllers primarily with memory from Toshiba. We do know that there are Phison PS3111-S11-based reference designs featuring Toshiba’s BICS2 memory (which is not exactly positioned for SSDs by Toshiba) as well as S11 drives with Micron’s 3D NAND memory.
The Palit SSDs are expected to hit the market in the coming months. We do not have any information about their MSRP of the new drives, but it is logical to assume that Palit will try to make them competitive in terms of pricing.
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Source: Palit
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vladx - Monday, April 3, 2017 - link
In my country, retailers usually cover the warranty themselves and then duke it out with the distributor/manufacturer so I personally have no such worries.bug77 - Monday, April 3, 2017 - link
I have once owned one of their video cards. It was best bang for the buck when I bought it and served me well for a few years. I have limited experience with their personnel, but they gave me the impression of people that knew what they were talking about (you know, the type that doesn't answer your question with a quote from the product manual). And they also seem to be doing their own (clever) custom designs.Maybe their logistics isn't the best, but their engineering seems to be ok. I'd buy from them again.
dave_the_nerd - Monday, April 3, 2017 - link
Isn't the market here already saturated enough?HomeworldFound - Monday, April 3, 2017 - link
Thinking the same thing, you're really taking a chance by trying to sell generic SSDs in a flooded market, unless Palit expects to be competing in the bargain bin I don't see them making enough money to bother.bug77 - Tuesday, April 4, 2017 - link
If you can sign a deal with a system builder to use your SSDs, you get a guaranteed revenue stream ;)Plus, there really is some value here since virtually the whole lineup is V-NAND.
HomeworldFound - Tuesday, April 4, 2017 - link
True but who's going to want to source retail products for system building when there are so many OEM sources already. If they didn't want to aim for end-users there are far better ways to run this business.vladx - Tuesday, April 4, 2017 - link
OEM usually buy the cheapest offerings available so Palit definitely has a place in the market.vladx - Monday, April 3, 2017 - link
More competition is always welcome, race to the bottom FTW!cfenton - Monday, April 3, 2017 - link
The article says "Palit Microsystems is one of the world’s largest producers of graphics cards". I've never heard of this company and I read lots of GPU reviews. Not that that means anything, but I'm surprised. Are they big in Europe or something?jwcalla - Monday, April 3, 2017 - link
Yep. Europe and Asia.