Crucial is unveiling its latest addition to its Gen4 consumer NVMe SSD lineup today - the T500 PCIe 4.0 M.2 2280 NVMe SSD. It takes over flagship duties from the Crucial P5 Plus in this category. The company had started to put focus on the high-end consumer SSD segment earlier this year with the launch of the T700 Gen5 NVMe SSD - it was one of the first to offer more than 12 GBps read speeds. The company is now introducing a T-series drive in the Gen4 segment with similar flagship credentials - sequential read and write speeds of 7400 / 7000 MBps.

The Crucial T500 is one of the first consumer SSDs to utilize the Phison E25 controller launched last year. The Micron 232L 3D TLC NAND in the SSD has been in mass production for a few quarters now, allowing the company to price the product competitively. Similar to the T700, this drive is targeted towards gamers, content creators, and professional users. While PCIe 5.0 SSDs are slowly getting introduced into the market, Gen4 units are still a sweet spot in terms of system compatibility, price, and performance for many use-cases.

The T500 is launching in three capacities and two variants - a heatsink and non-heatsink one. The 500GB version comes in a non-heatsink SKU only, while the 1TB and 2TB ones come in both variants. Crucial is promising a 4TB version next year. The company indicated that the heatsink SKUs is low-profile enough to be be used in the PlayStation 5.

Phison has been pushing DirectStorage optimizations in its high-end controllers, and it is no surprise that the T500 advertises the use of Phison's 'I/O+ Technology' to appeal to gamers. Given its high-performance nature, it is no surprise that the E25 controller needs to be equipped with DRAM for managing the flash translation layer (FTL). Crucial is using Micron LPDDR4 DRAM (1GB / TB of flash) in the T500 for this purpose.

Crucial T500 Gen4 NVMe SSD Specifications
Capacity 500 GB 1 TB 2 TB
Controller Phison PS5025-E25
NAND Flash Micron 232L 3D TLC NAND
Form-Factor, Interface Single-Sided M.2-2280, PCIe 4.0 x4, NVMe 2.0
Sequential Read 7200 MB/s 7300 MB/s 7400 MB/s
Sequential Write 5700 MB/s 6800 MB/s 7050 MB/s
Random Read IOPS 800K 1150K 1180K
Random Write IOPS 300K 600K 1200K
SLC Caching Static / Dynamic (up to 20% of user capacity)
TCG Opal Encryption Yes
Warranty 5 years
Write Endurance 300 TBW
0.33 DWPD
600 TBW
0.33 DWPD
1200 TBW
0.33 DWPD
MSRP $90 (18¢/GB) $120
(Non-Heatsink) (12¢/GB)
$130
(Heatsink) (13¢/GB)
$170
(Non-Heatsink) (8.5¢/GB)
$180
(Heatsink) (9¢/GB)

Flash pricing is quite low, with the memory industry being caught up in one of its downturns currently. While this has not been kind to the revenue numbers for the NAND flash / DRAM vendors, it has translated to excellent launch pricing for even flagship SSDs such as the Crucial T500 - starting from as low as 8.5¢/GB for the 2TB non-heatsink SKU.

Comments Locked

20 Comments

View All Comments

  • Threska - Tuesday, October 31, 2023 - link

    "...Gen4 units are still a sweet spot in terms of system compatibility, price, and performance for many use-cases."

    Need to bloat our OSes more.
  • SanX - Tuesday, October 31, 2023 - link

    Who are sleeping, Crucial, Anandtech or both? Time for PCIe 5 for a year or two already.
  • meacupla - Tuesday, October 31, 2023 - link

    What are you talking about?

    Crucial had their Gen5 T700 out since May 2023.
    It used the first available Gen5 controller, the Phison E26.

    In fact, Anandtech did cover the T700 back in March, when it was first announced.
    https://www.anandtech.com/show/18786/crucial-preps...
  • BvOvO - Wednesday, November 1, 2023 - link

    And also, who cares about them anyways. In real world scenario's they aren't even that much fast, if any. Since their power consumption is so insane they either throttle or you need a serious cooling block. I'd take the current gen PCIe4 SSD's over the current gen PCIe5 SSD's any day of the week.
  • back2future - Wednesday, November 1, 2023 - link

    [ time saved with PCIe5 is spent with objecting all 'legitimate interest' check boxes on 'special' web sites(?), with thinking 'Who are these hundreds/thousand(s) web companies listed?', guessing You are fast with 1sec/'check box', some pages would require up to 10-15mins, without reading all additional information
    1TB (~full disk size, fast) data transfer for PCIe4 ~130s, for PCIe5 ~90s, PCIe3 ~250-300s ]
  • TheinsanegamerN - Wednesday, November 1, 2023 - link

    What is this space grammar?
  • back2future - Thursday, November 2, 2023 - link

    Sorry, to me these are contradicting logical system disturbances/flaws, with urging higher hardware capabilities and on the other hand building up obstacles with configuration efforts (with confessing not to understand all social implications within a background behind that 'legitimate interest' structures)
    Does this need even more efficient grammar for space?

    On arriving early PCIe4 there were difficulties with higher heat on chipset area through improved/increased data transfer capabilities (seems in reality it's about twice on bandwidth to storage devices with PCIe transfer speed doubled from 8 to 16GT/s, PCIe4_x16 (16 dual-simplex lanes==16*4 data cables, pins 22&(x1_14,x4_42,x8_76)x16_142 ) ~32GB/s, PCIe_M.2 (upto 4 lanes, PCIe5_@2023, ideally) ~8GB/s, FEC arrives with PCIe6 )
  • Hifihedgehog - Monday, November 6, 2023 - link

    LOL. Is this a human or ChatGPT? Spitting out walls of text of information from specification sheets with ad infinitum conjunctions and commas does not make you smart. You are the living exemplification of this famous quote: "Where is the wisdom we have lost in knowledge? Where is the knowledge we have lost in information?" Wise up. PCIe 5.0 is substantially hotter and draws more power, so it is not worth it.
  • TheinsanegamerN - Wednesday, November 1, 2023 - link

    People said the same thing when gen 4 drives came out.
  • Hifihedgehog - Monday, November 6, 2023 - link

    Unlike Gen 3, many Gen 4 drives are still a problem for many laptops since the idle power is too high. Gen 5 is even worse and there is yet to be a low power solution worth consideration. The current ETA of Gen 5 NVMes for laptops is late 2024 at best just because of how bad the power situation is.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now