Patriot Memory has been selling solid-state drives for about eight years now. To date, virtually all of Patriot’s SSDs have used the Serial ATA interface, which became a performance-limiting factor in the recent years. At the Consumer Electronics Show this week, Patriot finally announced its first SSDs with the PCI Express 3.0 x4 interface. The new Hellfire solid-state drives will be available for purchase at the end of the first quarter.

The Patriot Hellfire SSDs are based on the Phison PS5007-E7, which is an eight-channel controller that supports the NVMe revision 1.20 protocol, the PCI Express 3.0 x4 interface as well as various types of NAND flash memory. The PS5007-E7 controller features error correction with 120-bit/2KB BCH code along with all the modern functionality, such as NVMe L1 power sub-states, power failure protection, end-to-end data path protection, an AES-256 engine, advanced global wear-leveling and so on. The Patriot Hellfire solid-state drives use MLC NAND flash memory, but the manufacturer yet has to reveal its exact type.

Patriot’s Hellfire SSDs will come in two form-factors: M.2 2280 card with PCIe 3.0 x4 interface as well as half-length half-height add-in-card with PCIe 3.0 x4 interface. The Hellfire M.2 and the Hellfire PCIe AIC drives will be available in 240 GB, 480 GB and 960 GB capacities.

The Hellfire M.2 2280 SSDs will offer sequential read speeds of up to 2500 MB/s and write speeds of up to 600 MB/s. The Hellfire PCIe AIC will be considerably faster with sequential read speeds of up to 3000 MB/s and write speeds of up to 2200 MB/s.

One of the reasons why the Hellfire SSDs in different form-factors offer different levels of performance despite of the same controller and logical interface is because the Phison PS5007-E7 controller cannot use all of its channels on an M.2 2280 card. It should also be noted that Phison’s reference M.2 2280 SSD with the PS5007-E7 ASIC (application specific integrated circuit) only supports capacities up to 512 GB.

Patriot will not be the only company on the market to offer high-performance solid-state drives based on the Phison PS5007-E7 controller. Phison sells its chips along with reference designs to actual makers of SSDs, so expect multiple companies to use the PS5007-E7 inside their high-end SSDs in 2.5-inch, M.2 and AIC form-factors. For example, G.Skill demonstrated its PS5007-E7-based Phoenix Blade X SSD at Computex 2015 about six months ago.

According to Patriot, its Hellfire PCIe AIC SSD will offer performance that will be higher than that of Samsung’s 950 Pro, which is one of the fastest solid-state drives today. If other producers manage to design SSDs with similar performance based on the PS5007-E7 ASIC, it will be a huge step forward for the whole market.

Comments Locked

7 Comments

View All Comments

  • Azethoth - Wednesday, January 6, 2016 - link

    I only just got an 850 Evo. Jelly, except that this probably would cost an arm and a leg in 2T capacity? I wonder how much difference it would make in compile times?
  • HollyDOL - Wednesday, January 6, 2016 - link

    If you already run on SSD not that much. There will be some difference but nowhere near the leap you have seed when you moved from HDD. More likely you can get limited on how your solutions are structured (ie. whether compiler can chew the code in parallel). And maybe you can also get limited on CPU in case of cpu-intensive compilations (C++) but usually 850Evo should be able to fetch data give or take on par to keep your cpu busy (counting with general desktop cpus, might be a bit different with enthusiast or enterprise many-core cpus). Different compilers also vary in their performance...
    There are many aspects that influence speed of compilation so hard to tell in your case, I wouldn't hold my breath for anything outside 5-20% range compared to your Evo.
  • HollyDOL - Wednesday, January 6, 2016 - link

    damn need edit button
    seen*
  • The_Assimilator - Wednesday, January 6, 2016 - link

    "According to Patriot, its Hellfire PCIe AIC SSD will offer performance that will be higher than that of Samsung’s 950 Pro..."

    I'll believe it if I see it, since all released Phison controllers have been low-end at best.
  • zodiacfml - Wednesday, January 6, 2016 - link

    It is probably a slot-in PCIe card, not the smaller M.2.
  • r3loaded - Wednesday, January 6, 2016 - link

    Looks tasty, but I'd really rather prefer a 2.5 inch drive and a U.2 interface.
  • hrrmph - Wednesday, January 6, 2016 - link

    +1

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now