


💨 Upgrade your speed, not your wait time!
The SanDisk X300 128GB SSD combines cutting-edge 1Ynm X3 flash technology with nCache 2.0 to deliver fast, reliable storage in a sleek 2.5” 7mm form factor. Featuring SATA III compatibility and sequential read/write speeds up to 520/450 MB/s, it’s engineered for professionals seeking a silent, efficient upgrade that fits a wide range of computing platforms.
| ASIN | B00O4OHA7O |
| Best Sellers Rank | #3,705 in Internal Solid State Drives #77,354 in Computer Internal Components |
| Brand | Sandisk |
| Color | Black |
| Customer Reviews | 3.6 3.6 out of 5 stars (103) |
| Date First Available | October 3, 2014 |
| Flash Memory Size | 128 |
| Hard Drive | 128 GB 1x128GB |
| Hard Drive Interface | Serial ATA-600 |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item Dimensions LxWxH | 6.1 x 4.8 x 0.9 inches |
| Item Weight | 2.08 ounces |
| Item model number | SD7SB6S-128G-1122 |
| Manufacturer | SanDisk |
| Product Dimensions | 6.1 x 4.8 x 0.9 inches |
| Series | SanDisk X300 |
T**G
Works well in 2009 MacBook Pro
Installed in a 2009 MacBook Pro, cloned over the old drive with carbon copy cloner (free trial), swapped it out and booted up. So far so good, read speeds 296, write speeds 202 mb, boot up time 20 sec with Mac OS X 10.10 El Capitan. It's ok, not terribly fast, but my laptop is still stuck with SATA2 speeds. Of note, the package is bare with zero documentation, just the drive in plastic sleeve haha that's it. So if you need a little hand holding, this is not for you, probably because it's marketed to businesses.
T**S
Speedy and Silent Performance
Hard drives are like silent partners; you don't usually appreciate them until they're gone or they flake out on you, and so they don't get the usual ecstatic "this changed my life" kind of praise that other components such as video cards get. I'm not about to rectify that imbalance with this review, but I am quite pleased with SanDisk's 256 Gb 2.5 SSD. I received a MacBook Pro recently and knew that the second or third thing I would do was swap out the 5400 hard drive for an SSD. I went searching around the interwebz, and found that Amazon had the best price. The SSD arrived quickly and installation was a breeze. With the OS installed and TRIM turned on, the MBP has been a joy to use. It's completely quiet, fast, and has generated no problems whatsoever. If you're looking for read/write speeds and a comparison of this SSD vs. others in the Samsung line or other SSDs, sorry -- I don't have other SSDs around to do that. However, a rather well-known fix/repair/upgrade site recommends this family of drives. It does what I wanted it to and after weeks of light-to-moderate usage and no problems, it's fully deserving of five stars.
J**H
HEED MY WARNING: DON'T DO IT!
I've had an X300 drive for a little over a year now and it just went kaput, dead, silent, useless....yup, I lost the data contained therein :( Luckily for me I also have a Samsung SSD that I got around the same time and I had my OS on my Samsung as well as a backup on my 4TB HDD so I didn't lose windows or my absolutely critical files but all of my save games and some of my documents are long gone. Spend the couple extra dollars to get a better drive than this POS...OR...make sure you've got a secondary which you're backing the data up to on a regular basis (which kinda defeats the purpose of having the drive.
C**Y
Not the fastest by any means, but solid for the price
We bought a couple of these for work to refresh older Linux machines in the lab that still had mechanical disks, and we're quite happy. This was a cheap upgrade, and was very much worth it. These systems don't need much in the way of local storage; everything of importance gets stored on a network file server, so these were primarily intended as OS & application drives. Because they're older, they don't need the latest and greatest by any means; their SATA ports are limited to 3Gb/s, so spending the money on the fastest SSDs known to mankind would have been a real waste. For the price, these seem to be great. They're significantly faster in use than a spinny rust drive, which is all that mattered to us. Compared to the latest and greatest from the likes of Samsung or Crucial (or even Sandisk's own Extreme Pro line, which are no slouches), these seem almost laughably slow, but that's not the point. In desktop usage, they seem snappy enough. Applications launch far faster than they did with the old mechanical drive, which is the whole point. Real-world file use with an ext4 filesystem suggests sequential reads are somewhere in the 270MB/s region, and writes a bit slower, perhaps 200MB/s or so. I didn't see any particular difference between fairly random, uncompressible data or a pile of zeroes from /dev/zero. On these older machines, copying data from one place to another on the same drive seems to be limited to a little under 110MB/s on average for long file copies (for example, 18.3GB of test junk copied to another file in 2m50s). The net bandwidth is obviously doubled as the data is read from the drive and then written back, so call it 220MB/s over long copies. The transfer rate was fairly consistent. with 'iotop' showing instantaneous peaks around 130MB/s and lows around 90MB/s. Actually, they're very consistent. Repeated copies of the same 18.3GB gibberish test file (an mp4 video that a colleague put together for a talk concatenated on itself a bunch of times to bring the size up to something reasonable) completed to within a second or two; copy times of 2m50.1s, 2m50.9s, 2m50.8s, 2m49.3s and 2m49.8s were observed back-to back. This consistency suggests that performance also doesn't go off a cliff when all of the available blocks have been written to at some point, which is a very good thing. It just seems to plod along at the same rate regardless, which is preferable to a drive that's amazingly fast until there are no more zeroed blocks left, then slows to a crawl. All the blocks on this drive have likely been filled at some point during my testing as it currently reports a total of 176GB written. In terms of raw performance. this is nothing to write home about. They work, but they don't come close to setting records (and the drive is apparently also not capable of saturating the available 3Gb/s SATA link). This would definitely be a 3-star product if it weren't for the price. These are significantly cheaper than a 120GB Evo 850 or Crucial BX100, and given we'll probably go through more machines to do the same thing with them, the cost savings start to add up quickly; three of these are roughly the same price of two of Samsung's or Crucial's offerings. For situations where outright speed isn't needed, a permanent buy-two-get-one-free setup can't be ignored. SMART reports 'Total_LBAs_Written' and 'Total_LBAs_Read' attributes, which appear to be in units of GB (both rising by 18 after copying said junk file) so guesstimating the remaining drive life should be simple enough (Crucial says > 80TBW on their website). I'm not sure what the raw value for the 'Media_Wearout_Indicator' represents, as it appears to climb over time and is larger than LBAs written. This did also rise by 18 for one copy so perhaps this is an indication of the effective writes after any amplification effect stated in GB? SMART's reported temperature doesn't rise by any huge amount while the drive is active. In this particular system the idle temperature appears to be about 30C, rising to 36C during minutes-long copy operations. I can't judge their long-term reliability just yet (i'll try to remember to report back in a year or so), but these have thrown up no initial surprises in installation and initial usage. To summarise, for replacing mechanical disks in cases where you don't need a lot of local file storage, these are a no-brainer. They're not exciting and aren't nearly as fast as the state of the art in SSDs, but they're far better than spinny disks, they appear to perform at the same consistent level instead of being very bursty with large peaks and troughs, and are cheap for their capacity. There are far faster and larger SSDs on the market, but if price is more of a concern than size or speed, these are definitely worth considering.
D**E
Solid Drive
5 Stars for the drive; 6 years and WD Dashboard says 96% life remaining. Not the fastest, but damn reliable. This ssd started life as a Windows 10 boot drive in my laptop, first cloned and then re-installed. Repurposed as an external ssd and then installed in one of my gaming towers. Migrated over to a new PC and is now strictly running VM images. I cant believe that this thing hasn't died yet. Hope it doesn't fall off a cliff.
D**E
Its served me well for now but the storage as ...
Its served me well for now but the storage as its mention'd isn't as given when plugged in and used. Typical of SanDisk, low cost, alright quality.
B**B
Three Stars
Died in less then 3 months, but it was replace by Scandisk
B**N
Great while it lasted.
The reason I love this drive is because until recently, Apricorn gave away a free single use license of their EZ Gig Cloner IV software with it. You used to be able to download it, and clone a larger (I regularly go from 1TB drives to 240GB SSDs) HDD to the smaller SSD without any hassle. No special instructions or anything, just pick the source, the destination, clone, power off and swap. Done. That software license was the reason I've bought and upgraded about 20 of these units in the last year. However, Apricorn recently ended the single use license version of their software for Sandisk upgrades. I'll probably move on to using Western Digital SSDs, now that they've finally released one.
P**C
Um ein Mid-2009 MacBook Pro noch eine Weile weiter nutzen zu können, wurde diese Platte angeschafft. Ich habe mich für diese Platte in erster Linie entschieden, weil Sie bei der ifixit-Anleitung zum Umbau verlinkt war. Ich hätte sonst zu einer Kingston oder Intel tendiert, wollte aber keine Überraschungen erleben. Der Um- und Einbau ging kinderleicht, wie ein Vorrezensent schon schrieb, die Platte wurde sofort erkannt und war für eine Neuinstallation bereit. Alles in allem eine absolut erfreuliche Sache. Und der Rechner ist wirklich kaum wiederzuerkennen.
K**V
Ich hatte diese SanDisk X300 512GB schon über 1,5 Jahre und mit sehr höhe intensiv (schreiben und lesen) und hatte noch nicht einzige Problem, dank durch nCache 2.0 technologie.
L**S
Aunque sea un SSD antiguo ya, para mi portátil va de maravilla, lo compre aprovechando la liquidación y he mejorado considerablemente mi portátil, hace un poco de ruido cuando esta en marcha no se si sera por el mecanismo o por otra cosa pero al principio es un poco molesto.
E**S
Buen disco para almacenamiento secundario, si estas buscando darle nueva vida a tu laptop un SSD podría ser la mejor opción. 8 meses y todo funciona bien, no es lo mejor de lo mejor pero si tiene muy buena relación costo-beneficios.
R**M
Item OK.
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