Transcend SSD370 Review
Transcend's premium SSD offering consists of a custom Silicon Motion controller that enables encryption and DEVSLP, but questionable flash makes it a poor choice.
Why you can trust Tom's Hardware
Sequential Steady State
Most professional users are not shopping for SSDs in the Transcend SSD370 price range for heavy use, but we still run the steady-state tests to look for products that stand out. We've been surprised in the past when a low cost model exhibited exemplary performance in workstation tasks.
The Transcend SSD370 512GB isn't that product, but the drive does manage to close the gap on the Crucial MX200, another low-cost SSD that competes with the 850 EVO 500GB for market share.
Current page: Sequential Steady State
Prev Page Random 80 Percent Read Mixed Workload Next Page Random Write Steady StateStay On the Cutting Edge: Get the Tom's Hardware Newsletter
Get Tom's Hardware's best news and in-depth reviews, straight to your inbox.