Testseek.com have collected 35 expert reviews of the A-Data XPG SX300 mSATA and the average rating is 84%. Scroll down and see all reviews for A-Data XPG SX300 mSATA.
(84%)
35 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Well known vendor, SandForce SF2281 controller, Full 256GB of storage available to use, Notable read IOPS – even at SATAII speeds
Drive pricing a little higher than comparable full blown SSD, Limited number of desktop motherboards support mSATA drives at 6Gbps,
With the shift in mobile storage slowly making its way over to mSATA drives – especially on the ultrabook front where weight and size has a huge impact of product sales its great to see that the range of drives now available on the consumer market is grow...
So what did we think of the ADATA SX300? Well overall we have been very impressed. ADATA have build a solid drive for mSATA use here with a mature controller and their own custom firmware. We don't see the point of including a 60day Norton trial but do li...
Abstract: The first mSATA-based SSDs we reviewed wowed us with diminutive dimensions, but not as much with performance. Today's best efforts are a lot more like their desktop equivalents, though. We round up 10 models between 64 and 256 GB and nail down a winner...
Announcement: Despite the circumstance that the rating of a product is based on as many objective facts as possible there are factors which can have an influence on a rating after publication Every autor may perceive data differently over time whereas one...
We were kind of expecting it, but it's nice to see concrete proof that mSATA SSDs are as fast as their 2.5-inch counterparts, despite their small size. The Adata SX300 128GB scores almost exactly the same in every benchmark as the Adata SX900 128GB that...
ideal for a boot drive in either a laptop or desktop environment, compressible performance, decent IOPS results,
incompressible data suffers a performance penalty, Many desktop motherboard mSATA slots are limited to 3Gbps, will be more expensive than a 2.5 inch drive with similar performance characteristics, Kitguru says: If you want to adopt an mSATA drive for your
The ADATA XPG SX300 128GB is another very capable Sandforce 2281 powered unit targeting the latest motherboards released with mSATA support.The popularity of the mSATA interface is slowly rising, thanks to the release of portable computers such as the Del...
Published: 2014-06-26, Author: Tom , review by: modders-inc.com
For me, new technology is exciting. While SSDs are not “new” the mSATA form factor is relatively new. For motherboards that support mSATA gone is the need for a traditional style hard drives. The drive will mount directly to the board. This opens a whole ...
Small form factor, Solid performance, 3 year warranty
A little more expensive than other mSATA drives
I really like the idea of mSATA solid state drives. While they have not really caught on that much on the desktop market now that M.2 is here, they have great applications in laptops and smaller form factor PCs like the Gigabyte BRIX that we recently rev...
Abstract: The ADATA XPG SX300 and Intel 525 Series brings the SandForce SF-2281 experience to the tiny mSATA form factor without missing a beat.
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Published: 2013-01-06, Author: Andrew , review by: tomshardware.com
Abstract: The first mSATA-based SSDs we reviewed wowed us with diminutive dimensions, but not as much with performance. Today's best efforts are a lot more like their desktop equivalents, though. We round up 10 models between 64 and 256 GB and nail down a winner. ...