In testing Edlink G55H, we used our latest test bed PC, especially designed for bench marking PCI 5.0 M2SDS. This is made around a Asrock X670e Taichi An AMD X670 chip set, 32GB DDR5 memory, a PCIE 5.0 X4 M.2 slot (with direct access to CPUs), and Mother Board with three PCIE 4.0 slot. System games a AMD Ryzen 9 7900 CPU using AMD stock cooler; A Jeffour RTX 2070 Super Graphics Card containing 8GBGD DR 6SDRAM. And a thermaltic tuff power GF1 ice 750 watts power supply. Boot drive is a Adata Legend 850 PCIE 4.0 SSD. (Reviewer SSD is tested as a secondary data drive.)
We apply ad link drive through your usual slate of the internal solid state drive benchmark: Crystal Disk Mark 6.0, UL’s PC Mark 10 storage, and UL’s 3DMark storage benchmark. The last gaming -related load and a drive performance in launch tasks measures.
Crystal DiscMark’s setting speed test drive provides traditional moves of throw pit, which imitates the best condition of large files, direct line transfer. We use this test extensively to see if our test speed is in accordance with the manufacturer’s rating speed.
At high speed, the G55H rating and testing setting results put it to the lower level of the PCI 5.0 SSD, as well as Gigabite and the 10000, Adata Legend 970, and Seaget Fire Koda 540, whose reading speed is around 10,000 MBPS. The speed of writing this setting is the lowest in any general 5 SSD we have experienced. Its sequence reading and writing speed are less than both PCI 5 SSD than other drums we have experienced, the main P510.
In 4K Red Testing, while the WD Black SN 8100 posted a score that was 31 % higher than the ad link drive, G55H read results were largely substantial of the two PCI 4 SSD scores in our comparison group, along with the remaining parts of the PCI Express 5 drive. As far as the 4K writing test is concerned, the G55H PCIE was on the top of the tight grouping of the score from 5.0 drives, with two PCIE 4.0 sticks laying behind the pack. (Good 4K writing performance is especially important for the SSD used as a boot drive, though we try them as secondary drives.)
PC Mark 10 overall storage tests measure a drive speed in performing various routine tasks such as launching Windows, loading sports and loading creative apps, and copying both small and large files. The G55H’s overall score was close to the bottom of the pack, though it pushed the P510 less important than the play. Although he performed better than one of the two general 4 SSDs in our comparison group, WD SN850x, he was defeated by the second, important T500 in this test. In individual tests, when accumulated, PC Mark 10 overall storage scores, the G55H scores from all cross -to -middle.
Finally, the Gaming Sentrick Three Mark Storage Benchmark, the G55H score was third to third, which was ahead of the main P510 and the Lexor NP1090 Pro, but two of our generals are behind 4 comparisons.