

You'll want to check any specific board with one of these chipsets for 4.0 support details. Unlike many other high-end SSDs, the SSD 980 Pro is one of an elite class to feature support for the PCI Express 4.0 standard, supported at this writing so far only by AMD motherboards based on the X570 and B550 (mainstream Ryzen) chipsets, as well as the TRX40 chipset (for Ryzen Threadripper CPUs). You’ll need an M.2 slot available that supports both 80mm-long drives (aka, Type-2280) and the PCI Express bus with NVMe support the SSD 980 Pro comes in only one physical size and one bus flavor. It's not the larger 2.5-inch Serial ATA-based shell that older SSDs come in. Like most modern high-end SSDs, the SSD 980 Pro is a small rectangle that must be installed in a vacant M.2 slot on your motherboard. The first step in selecting an SSD to serve as the boot drive of your new or existing PC is to determine the capabilities of the motherboard in which you’re going to install it. We've seen plenty of budget-model 1TB drives down in the $100 range, under the price of even the 500GB version, so this is a decidedly premium product. Our 1TB tester calculates out to just shy of 23 cents per gigabyte. We typically like to see internal SSD prices top out at around 15 cents per gigabyte, so all of these models are rather expensive, even for cutting-edge PCI Express drives. Samsung says that a 2TB version of the SSD 980 Pro will be available later this year, though it did not announce pricing. The new drive will be available in three capacities besides the 1TB version. The SSD 980 Pro replaces the SSD 970 Pro, introduced in 2018 as Samsung’s flagship internal consumer SSD in the M.2 form factor. It's our new top pick for high-end internal SSDs. This screaming-fast drive is a bit expensive in the $229.99 1TB version we tested (it starts at $89.99 for a version with a fourth of that trunk space), but it’s an excellent value for its raw speed, if you can harness it. An M.2 drive with support for the latest iteration of the PCI Express bus, the SSD 980 Pro will speed up application and game launches, as well as big file transfers, with its maximum rated throughput of 7,000MBps. PC builders and upgraders looking for the one of the fastest mainstream SSDs on the market-and rocking a late-model AMD Ryzen desktop-should take a deep, long, lusting look at the Samsung SSD 980 Pro. How to Set Up Two-Factor Authentication.How to Record the Screen on Your Windows PC or Mac.How to Convert YouTube Videos to MP3 Files.How to Save Money on Your Cell Phone Bill.How to Free Up Space on Your iPhone or iPad.

How to Block Robotexts and Spam Messages.
