

Product Details
- Size: 240 GB
- Color: Black
- Brand: OCZ
- Model: RVD3MI-FHPX4-240G
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: .87" h x
3.90" w x
6.60" l,
.45 pounds
- Hard Disk: 240GB
Features
- Delivers up to 140,000 IOPS (505MB/s)
- Bandwidth up to 1.9 GB/s
- Up to 3X faster than SATA 6 Gb/s solutions
- Uses premium NAND flash components for ever faster bandwidth and IOPS performance
- Only virtualization layer in the industry with TRIM and SCSI unmap support
- Enables SMART monitoring for system administrators
- Up to 55 bits correctable per 512-byte sector (BCH)*varies depending on exact configuration
- VCA 2.0 presents as a complete storage subsystem for superior data management
Product Description
NAND Components : Synchronous 25nm Multi-Level Cell (MLC)/ Interface: PCI-Express Gen. 2 x4/ Form Factor: PCIe Full Height/ Storage Controller: OCZ SuperScale/ NAND Controller: SandForce 2281 x 2/ MTBF: 1 million hours/ Data Reliability: Read unrecoverable bit error rate (UBER) 10e-16 (<1 in 1016 bits read)/ Power Consumption: Idle: 13.5 W Active: 14.3 W/ Operating Temperature: 0 degree C ~ 70 degree C/ Storage Temperature: -45 degree C ~ 85 degree C/ Shock Resistance: 1500G/ Certifications: RoHS, CE, FCC/ Operating System: Windows 7 32-bit and 64-bit/ Power Requirements: PCI-Express 12V & 3.3V/ Performance Optimization: TRIM/SCSI Unmap (requires OS support), Drivers / Secure Erase: Enabled via OCZ Toolbox
Customer Reviews
Most helpful customer reviews
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful.Fast Fast Fast, but mobo RAID must be disabled
By mpinch
Been working great for 10 months now.This made my machine much faster and more responsive. Like getting a new PC.Downside of this is that you can't easily (or at all) get it to work with disk based backup programs like Macrium Reflect (which I love). A SATA SSD is a more portable and more compatible choice, but SATA SSDs are not as fast as this PCI "disk". My desktop was about 18 months old and was fast when I bought it, but it seemed sluggish compared to my SSD-based laptop. This drive fixed that.I could not get the drive to work initially. I had an existing RAID array using the intel software and the RAID capability on the motherboard. I was going to keep my existing RAID as drive D, but I had to move it to a Windows based software RAID to get it to work.It took FOREVER to figure out how to get windows to work and the key was that NO RAID could be configured in the intel raid bios. Even if you aren't using it on this disk, it cannot be configured. Once I turned all the raid off in the motherboard BIOS and moved my disk to Windows RAID (RAID via Windows), it worked fine. That was quite a bit of work.Maybe newer drivers fix this.


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