Testseek.com have collected 98 expert reviews of the Kingston M.2 A1000 NVMe PCIe and the average rating is 78%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Kingston M.2 A1000 NVMe PCIe.
May 2018
(78%)
98 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
The NVMe protocol is designed to supercharge storage and take us beyond the limits of the old SATA bus. There are many products available that do just that, but the Kingston A1000 isn't one of them.It's disappointing to have the new lean NVMe command set...
Published: 2018-05-08, Author: Ben , review by: enostech.com
the drive performed as we would hope and this is surely in part due to the design and choosing of the components that this drive is comprised of.ValueComing in just shy of £73 here in the U.K. at the time of review, this drive offers a very attractive pr...
Published: 2018-04-30, Author: Simon , review by: kitguru.net
Overall performance, 5-year warranty
At the time of writing, there is no Kingston SSD Manager support for the drive
Having previously reviewed the DCP1000, a monster of a drive aimed squarely at the enterprise market segment, it has been quite interesting to review the new A1000 as it is aimed at the entry/value part of the market.In terms of performance, Kingston quot...
Better than SATA performance, Compatibility through single-sided M.2 2280 module, Cloning software included, Low price for an NVMe solution,
Not as fast as PCIe x4 NVMe solutions, “Budget doesn’t mean that you have to be slow. Kingston’s A1000 shows how to make a wallet-friendly NVMe drive. A great SATA alternative!”, Kingston A1000 480GB NVMe SSD Review, We would like to thank, Kingston, for
Pricing and AvailabilityAt the time of this review, Kingston's A1000 480GB M.2 NVMe drive can be yours for £153.33 or $189.99 through Amazon. The larger 960GB version will cost you £298.20 while the smaller 240GB will set you back £87.34. That is not a lo...
The Vulcan 500GB SSD is of a magnitude faster than any mechanical hard drive or SSHD in almost every way, At 7nm, the Vulcan SSD is thin and light and fits easily in most notebooks and desktops for a simple drop-in upgrade, 3-year warranty backed by Team
None, This has been quite an enjoyable exploration comparing our other three drives with the T-FORCE Vulcan 500GB SSD. The performance of this drive is very good as a stand-alone SATA-based SSD, eval(ez_write_tag([[300,250],'babeltechreviews_com-medrecta
We are giving the $59 T-FORCE Vulcan 500GB BTR's “Recommended” Award as it is significantly faster than any HDD or SSHD, and it is faster overall than the slightly cheaper ($58) Team Group L5 3D 480GB SSD. For gamers, the T-FORCE Vulcan 500GB SSD compete...
Good Overall Performance (1600MB/s Read & 1000MB/s Write), Endurance Numbers (300TBW / 1 Million Hours MTBF), Kingston SSD Manager Software, 5 Years Warranty, Price (For Some),
Thermal Throttling,
Kingston lists the A1000 line of NVMe M.2 solid state drives as part of their entry level solutions and although they are still 2-3 times faster compared to regular SATA M.2 models in the NVMe market they are exactly that (for example their...
Published: 2018-10-18, Author: Daniel , review by: pocketables.com
Abstract: Our first look at NVME left us hungry for more even if we were hesitant of the pricepoint. Kingston saw fit to follow up on their KC1000 with a drive that offered the same capacity in a less wallet emptying form with the A1000.We detailed our new test sys...
Published: 2018-08-06, Author: The , review by: hardwarebbq.com
Lowcost upgrade, Onesided PCB, Fiveyear Warranty, Drive's temperature on load fairly reasonable
Writespecific performance lower than midtohigh performance M.2 variants, Product label should be in the other side of the PCB for the desktop system's M.2 heatspreaders to have direct contact
Kingston A1000-The cheap M.2 Upgrade Option!The Kingston A1000 M.2 NGFF kit is a low-cost upgrade option. That's fair enough considering its read performance stands out compared to SATA III SSDs, making it more suitable for the masses who wish to upgrade...