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Transcend 32GB SSD370S 32 GB 2.5 Inch SATA III 6 Gb/s Internal Solid State Drive MLC NAND -TS32GSSD370S

£18.17

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Description
Specifications
Reviews 12
Description


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From the manufacturer

Features

SSD370SSD370

MLC NAND flash inside

Transcend’s SSD370S is manufactured with reliable, top-tier MLC NAND flash memory to ensure superior stability and endurance, making it well-suited to high-end applications.

SSD370SSD370

Performance boost for everyday computing

Taking full advantage of the SATA III 6Gb/s interface, DDR3 DRAM cache and a powerful controller, Transcend’s SSD370S delivers blazing-fast read and write speeds of up to 560MB/s and 460MB/s.

SSD370SSD370

Guaranteed endurance and reliability

Transcend’s SSD370S offers great Terabytes Written (TBW) values (up to 408 TB) indicating the total amount of data you can write into the drive over its lifetime. It also features Error Correcting Code (ECC), Garbage Collection, Wear-leveling, and DevSleep.

SSD370SSD370

A better choice than HDD

Solid-state drives dominate the market for PC upgrades because they are faster and lighter than hard disk drives. SSDs also feature less power, create less noise when in operation, and are more shock-resistant than traditional hard drives.

SSD370SSD370

3 easy steps to upgrade your PC

Transcend’s SSD370S measures just 6.8mm in height and features short access times, making it a perfect choice for upgrading desktops, laptops, and the latest gaming consoles in just 3 easy steps!

SSD370SSD370

SSD Scope software

Transcend SSD Scope is advanced, user-friendly software that makes it easy to ensure your Transcend SSD remains healthy, and continues to run fast and error-free by determining the condition and optimizing the performance of your drive.

SSD370SSD370

Guaranteed quality

Transcend’s solid state drives are built to the highest standards, are rigorously tested, and offer outstanding quality, performance, and reliability.

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Customer Reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars 1,037

4.3 out of 5 stars 5,543

4.3 out of 5 stars 5,543

4.2 out of 5 stars 61

4.3 out of 5 stars 41

Price

USD 27.01USD27.01 USD 25.35USD25.35 USD 112.65USD112.65
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Capacity
128GB ~ 1TB 120GB ~ 480GB 32GB ~ 1TB 32GB ~ 256GB 32GB ~ 256GB

Interface
SATA III 6Gb/s SATA III 6Gb/s SATA III 6Gb/s SATA III 6Gb/s SATA III 6Gb/s

Form Factor
2.5 inch 2.5 inch 2.5 inch 2.5 inch 2.5 inch

Flash Type
3D NAND flash 3D NAND flash MLC NAND flash MLC NAND flash MLC NAND flash

Terabytes Written (Max.)
560 TB 160 TB 408 TB 230 TB 282 TB

Max. Sequential Read/Write (ATTO)
R 560MB/s, W 520MB/s R 540MB/s, W 500MB/s R 560MB/s, W 460MB/s R 560MB/s, W 500MB/s R 550MB/s, W 330MB/s

Max. 4K Random Read/Write (CrystalDiskMark)
R 340MB/s, W 330MB/s R 200MB/s, W 280MB/s R 300MB/s, W 300MB/s R 180MB/s, W 330MB/s R 310MB/s, W 320MB/s

Max. 4K Random Read/Write (IOmeter)
R 85,000 IOPS, W 85,000 IOPS R 50,000 IOPS, W 75,000 IOPS R 75,000 IOPS, W 75,000 IOPS R 60,000 IOPS, W 86,000 IOPS R 75,000 IOPS, W 80,000 IOPS

DDR3 DRAM Cache


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Technology
TRIM & NCQ command, S.M.A.R.T., Advanced Garbage Collection, DevSleep mode, RAID engine, LDPC coding TRIM & NCQ command, S.M.A.R.T., Advanced Garbage Collection, DevSleep mode, RAID engine, LDPC coding TRIM & NCQ command, S.M.A.R.T., Advanced Garbage Collection, DevSleep mode, ECC TRIM & NCQ command, S.M.A.R.T., Advanced Garbage Collection, DevSleep mode, ECC TRIM & NCQ command, S.M.A.R.T., Advanced Garbage Collection, DevSleep mode, ECC

High-Speed Performance: The SSD370 offers blazing-fast read and write speeds with its SATA III 6Gbs interface, ensuring quicker system boot-up, faster file transfers, and seamless multitasking across applications
3D NAND Technology: The SSD370 integrates advanced 3D NAND flash memory, improving both the durability and energy efficiency, making it a long-lasting storage solution for personal or business needs
Energy Efficient: Optimized for low power consumption, the SSD370 reduces energy usage while maintaining top-tier performance, making it optimal for laptop users looking to extend battery life
Silent and Durable: As a solid-state drive with no moving parts, the SSD370 operates silently and is more shock-resistant, making it more reliable than traditional hard drives
Advanced Data Protection: The SSD370 features ECC (Error Correction Code) technology and wear leveling, ensuring data integrity and a longer drive lifespan for consistent performance over time
User-Friendly Installation: The SSD370 is designed for easy installation, featuring a 2.5-inch form factor compatible with most laptops and desktops, allowing for straightforward upgrades or replacements

Customers say

Customers find the SSD performs well, starting up their OS quickly, and appreciate its speed, with one customer noting a 17-second boot time on Windows 7. The drive receives positive feedback for its quality, with one customer mentioning it’s ideal for ESX server use, and customers consider it good value for money. They like the fast booting performance and the included adapter tray. The capacity and cloning software features receive mixed reviews.

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Specifications
Reviews 12

12 reviews for Transcend 32GB SSD370S 32 GB 2.5 Inch SATA III 6 Gb/s Internal Solid State Drive MLC NAND -TS32GSSD370S

R. P. Cunningham

A Fast & Very Affordable SSD Solution
I am one of the fortunate people who get to do what they love for work. Being a total geek & the owner of a small independent computer repair business, I am what is commonly known as an early adopter. My first SSD was purchased from Crucial in 2011 for a ridiculous price of £325 for a 256gb drive. That drive is still in use and going strong. Still very much faster than a conventional mechanical hard drive.Anyway, this Transcend drive appeared as a lightning deal and it just happened that I needed another SSD for a PC. I paid just over £30 for it and also got free delivery. The drive arrived quickly in full retail packaging and as an unexpected bonus, included the adapter tray which enables it to be mounted into a bay intended for 3.5 inch hard drives.There is also a link to download free cloning software which allows you to clone your operating system from your old drive to the SSD. In conclusion, this is an excellent SSD which is plenty big for your operating system and software. Combined with a large mechanical drive for data storage, it offers a great solution for hardly any money. Highly recommended.

Richard

Ideal Pi Database disk.
Requirement: Small SSD to replace a disk drive used for a small Postgres database on a Raspberry Pi running Bacula as a low power backup solution for a small/home office. A genuine SSD rather than USB flash offers much lower power consumption, higher access speed and longer life. While the HD was working well there was a constant disk noise and 24/7 operation is not for a portable “spinning rust” drive.I originally bought a cheap Kingspec device that was a total failure. Happy to say this has now been in place for two weeks and was subjected to a comprehensive set of tests on both a Pi and a “proper” PC before being used and it passed with flying colours. Latency on disk access is much reduced leading to three times the throughput during backups as it’s not waiting so long to update the catalog.My only surprise is it still needs to be run via USB hub (this is connected to a USB to SATA adaptor) as it cannot run directly off the Pi’s own USB ports, but of course the adaptor has its own power needs. The disk is the smallest in the range and is still eight times larger than needed, so hopefully wear levelling mean it will last for a very long time.The unit feels very light and is very cool in operation.

Ian T

Light, fast data storage.
I needed high speed, compact data storage for a large data set (±400Gb total) that I only run occasionally. I wanted dedicated storage for this app only external to my Mac. I excluded Cloud storage as I sometimes need to use it in areas with poor no internet..So far the Transcend SSD has met all my needs. It was easy to reformat and data transfer was rapid. I obtained the right SSD capacity at an acceptable price. It is light and easy to carry when traveling.My reason for 4 rather than 5 stars is because it is still relatively new and I do not yet know how reliable and durable it will prove in the longer term.

Scopex

Excellent drive
Although i use windows 8.1 on my laptop i still had a spare hard drive with the Windows 10 upgrade installed, i keep this updated and might one day use it instead of 8.1, with this in mind i looked for an SSD as using Win 10 on a 5400 rpn hard drive was sometimes like wading through treaclethe main reason for choosing the Transcend was price but also because i have had experience with the brand and their support is second to none,as soon as the drive arrived i installed it in my laptop and used a usb caddy to connect the original drive to the laptop, using Acronis cloning software i cloned the hard drive to the SSD which took around 30 minutes, when it had finished i rebooted and in less than a minute had Win 10 running as usual but much faster, it has noticeably improved the overall performence of the laptop with app’s now opening in a couple of seconds at most, the Edge browser now opens in just one second,as soon as it is clicked on it on the screen ready to gothe SSD itself came well packaged and was very well protected in the box which also contained spare screws and an installation guide and a warranty card, i registered the drive on the Transcend website which activates the warranty,from the website i also downloaded the SSd Scope software which allows many different options from testing and benchmarking to getting the full specs of the drive etc, it will even download any updates for youalso available for download is a free recovery programme which can recover deleted files etc from any drivegiven that my laptop is only Sata 2 i will not be getting the full Sata 3 performance from it but it has improved the Windows 10 experience enough for me to make it a sound purchase, i wouldn’t hesitate to recommend this to anyone looking to improve a sluggish pc

BadmanDave

Great upgrade
Bout this to change my old HDD to an SSD.The HDD was 1TB but on its last legs & I didnt need that much space so settles for a 240GB SSD.Easy install, just added the new SSD to the other SATA channel, then cloned the HDD to the SSD using a free package called “AOMEI Backupper Standard 5.3”. (Google it).It tries to sell u the pro version but dont buy it just use the standard Clone button.Once cloned then swap the sata wire from the old HDD to the new SSD and your good to go.Windows 10 now boots up in around 8 seconds – Brilliant!!

TheWolfInsideUs

Not even half of advertised max speed – first ssd purchase though.
My very first SSD i bought, and im mixed on it. Bought it since it was the best max speed around this price range at 560read and 460mb write, but when i got it and crystaldiskmarked… 220mb read and 40mb write. Dissapointed it didn’t even reach half of the max advertised, with the read being only 10mb faster than my hdd…

Potatohead

I highly recommend it and the price makes it an absolute bargain
This is my third SSD and the largest so far. It took a few short minutes to physically attach it to my system and the software from Transcends website took just over an hour to shift 460Gb of data and OS onto the new drive. I am very impressed with its speed, others may be faster but you can bet you’ll pay a hefty premium for a few milliseconds. I highly recommend it and the price makes it an absolute bargain.

criticoptic

Bei Notebook-Festplatten vertraue ich auf Fabrikate mit 512 GB weil sie das beste Preis-Leistungsverhältnis und reichlich Reserven für das Betriebssystem, Wiederherstellungen und Dateien bieten.Im Einzelnen:- Samsung 850 EVO (wie könnte es anders sein). Irgendwann für 138,39 als Blitzangebot gekauft. Die PRO sind mir zu teuer und ich brauche nicht zwingend Platten, die 10 Jahren halten, bis dahin, falls ich noch lebe, werden sie sowieso um 75 % billiger. Also muß ich nicht mein Kapital dafür langfristig binden.- Samsung 840 PRO. Da habe ich noch eine davon. Sie ist vielleicht 4-5 Jahre alt und scheint unsterblich zu sein.- Samsung 750 EVO. War als Blitzangebot am Prime Day für 108,69 Euro super günstig, also her damit.- Toshiba Q300 PRO, eine gute Alternative zu Samsung, damals für etwa 160 Euro ziemlich günstig- Diese Transcend SSD370S, als Blitzangebot für 137,90, also her damit.- Sandisk Extreme Pro 480 GB (so gut wie 0,5 TB). Monatelang habe ich sie bei Amazon vergeblich beobachtet, aber sie blieb bei 180 Euro. So habe ich gestern bei der Bucht gleich zwei fast neuwertige für rd. 105 Euro pro Stück gekauft.- Intel 320 Series 600 GB: Von zwei ist bereits eine krepiert, würde ich nicht wieder kaufen.Dazu noch eine Transcend 256 GB weil sie als Blitzangebot günstig war, aber für einen Notebook mit nur einem HDD-Platz, eigentlich zu knapp. Würde ich nicht wieder kaufen.Die einzigen Premium SSD, die ich noch nicht testen könnte sind die Kingston HyperX Savage, die Sandisk X400 und die Crucial MX300, weil die Preise bisher einfach zu hoch und einfach nicht sinken wollten.Insgesamt haben wir diese o.g. SSDs in 5 Laptops, meistens zwei pro Gerät wenn genug Platz vorhanden ist.Sie erlauben Startgeschwindigkeiten, die – je nach Konfiguration – ab 15 Sekunden liegen und i.d.R. doppelt bis dreimal kürzer sind als mit den Premium HDDs von Seagate, WD, Hitachi und Toshiba, die wir vorher drin hatten.Wenn Bearbeitugssoftware und Dateien auf SSDs sind, was bei uns der Fall ist – dann werden die Dateien ohne gefühlte Wartezeiten am Bildschirm bereit gestellt.Ob die eine oder andere SSD schneller ist oder nicht ist ziemlich egal, die Unterschiede sind minimal, vielleicht eine oder zwei Sekunden beim Start.Deswegen würde ich mir kein Kopf machen, die o.g. lohnen sich alle, bis auf die zwei, die ich nicht mehr kaufen würde.SSDs werden mit der Zeit zunächst etwas schneller weil das Puffer und die Algorythmen besser arbeiten, dann langsamer weil sie immer voller werden und Reseve-Sektoren für die fehlerhaften aktiviert werden (Overprovisioning). Aber auch das hat in der Praxis reine akademische Bedeutung.Diese Transcend finde ich mit z.Z. 161 Euro ein wenig zu teuer, es geht nicht um grosse Beträge, aber immerhin genug um sich z.B. eine praktische ICY-Box zu leisten um eine externe HDD reinzustecken und als externer Masserspeicher zu verwenden.Pfennigfuchser werden die Samsung 750 EVo oder die Sandisk für 120 Euro bevorzügen, das läßt genug Geld über für eine neuwertige 1 TB HDD, die als Massenspeicher ohnehin besser geeignet ist.Andererseits ist die 370 S eine MLC, das heißt, es werden 2 Informationen pro Zelle gespeichert. Bei den preiswertesten SSDs werden 3 oder mehr Informationen pro Zelle gespeichert. Das verkürzt die Lebensdauer und erhöht die Fehlerquote. Ich glaube sogar exponential.Bei SSDs gehen bei jeden Schreibvorgang die Stromkanäle ein wenig mehr kaputt, bei Lesevorgänge gibt es keine Begrenzung.Wer intensiv die Festplatte benutzt ist also mit dieser Transcend vermutlich besser bedient.Und da kommen wir zum weiteren Nachteil der SSDs im Allgemeinen.1 GB kostet z.Z. bei dieser Transcend 31,5 cents, bei einer 1 TB HDD aber rd. 4,5 cents.Wenn man also ganz viele Daten sichern möchte, und das macht man i.d.R. über Nacht so das Zeit keine Rolle spielt, dann ist eine 1TB HDD das Richtige. Natürlich kann man auch kleinere noch günstiger Kaufen wenn man nicht so ein Bedarf hat. Aber kleine HDDs werden in Zukunft kaum verkäuflich sein und der Preisunterschied liegt oft bei einem Zwanziger.In unsere Familie benutzen wir vier WD My Passport Ulta 2TB um vor allem Fotos und Videos zu speichern.Die gibt es ab 80 Euro bis rd. 110 Euro.Die Metal Edition ist ca. 10-15 Euro teuerer, sieht aber wunderschön aus und ist weniger kratzempfindlich als die Hochglanz-Ausführung.aus Plastik.Es gibt auch diese Baureihe bis 4 TB, aber man muss bedenken, daß sie emfindlicher sind und wenn ein Crash erfolgt, dann ist es besser die Dateien auf mehreren kleineren HDDs zu verteilen.Ausserdem haben wir auch Seagate Expansion 2 TB und zwei Toshiba Stor.e und sind sehr zufrieden damit. Sie sind sehr empfehlenswert.Besonders viel Lob verdient meine Platinum 500 GB, die seit fast 10 Jahren täglich im Einsatz ist und noch perfekt läuft.Alle diese 2,5 Zoll-Platten in Gehäuse fest eingebaut kann ich wirklich empfehlen. Wenn man sie benutzt, reicht eine Transcend SSD370S mit 512 GB allemal, weil die o.g. HDDs als Massenspeicher fungieren.Man kann sie natürlich mühelos von einem Rechner zum Anderen transportieren und anschliessen.Wer braucht da noch Cloud ?Die nächste Lösung sind interne Festplatten, die man selber in Gehäuse reinsteckt und die SSD im Rechner ergänzen.Das ist am peiswertesten.Ich kam dazu, weil durch den Ersatz durch SSDs, ich über eine habe Dutzend HDDs hatte, die zunächst in einem Schukarton landeten und dort zunächst vergessen wurden.Abgesehen von den 3.5 Zoll-Festplatten, die teuere Docking-Stations mit Stromversorgung benötigen und Kabelsalat verursachen, sind diese kleinen, nackten Festplatten eine feine Sache. Man kann sie auch jederzeit im Notebbok wieder einbauen, falls die Festplatte dort crashen sollte. Das dauert nur Minuten. Die Installation natürlich nicht, sie Dauert 1 halben Tag.Da eine SSD selten alleine kommt, hier sehr Kompakte und zuverlässige HDDs als Ergänzng für Massenspeicherung:- WD Scorpio Blue 1.0 TB WD10JPVT- Toshiba L200 und H200 (Größe nach Bedarf)- Samsung M8 HN-M101MBB- Seagate Laptop SSHD- Hitachi Travelstar 5K1000 und 7K1000Die Hitachi drehen mit 7.200 U/min, die Anderen mit 5.400 U/min. Sie sind also etwas schneller aber auch ein wenig wärmer.Dazu als 2,5 Zoll Gehäuse:- Icy Box IB-AC603a-U3 USB 3.0 zu SATA II (15 Euro) sehr kurzes 14 cm-Kabel, fest gelötet, durchsichtige Tupperdose- CSL – USB 3.0 2,5″ SSD / SATA Festplattengehäuse extern (10 Euro, Alles Plastik, aber schön)- CnMemory Leergehäuse Zinc 2,5 Zoll USB 3.0 HDD Festplatten-Alu-Gehäuse (8,90 Euro bei Rohling Express, sehr schön, braucht TX6-Schraubenzieher).Es macht natürlich sehr viel Spaß seine eigene externe Festplatte durch Kombination von HDD / SSD und Gehäuse, die es meistens in vielen Farben gbt, zu schaffen.Dazu ein Premium-Kabel, z.B. von Roline Gold oder AmazonBasics und man hat ein schönes und exklusives Teil, das auch noch deutlich preiswerter ist als eine Standard externe Festplatte.Viel Spaß !

uttam kumar

I’m using core2Duo system OS-7 64 bit.Before using transcend SSD my boot time is approx 1 Mint. After installing this Transcend SSD System boot aprox. 18 Sec.Now I’m using so many application at a time like Photo editing, Coping, playing Game But it work so smoothly.Transcend product price is high compare to any other brand, but it is my fist choice.HDD is so important in Computer because if it crash Your whole DATA will lost. So I blindly believe in Transcend Product. And if you purchase any Transcend product don’t forget to verify whether You get Original product or not by its serial no. . Check product originality in Transcend website

Awesomeface

Small SSDs are getting hard to find. This is actually a fairly fast SSD in a small aluminum enclosure. I wanted it to use with a raspberry pi, and wanted something a little more reliable than a USB stick or small flash storage device. It works well. Supports SMART features so I can get a warning if the drive is going to die. Performance is on par or better than similarly priced kingston drives. Runs cool enough to sit under the pi without adding anything to the temperatures.You may want to just buy a bigger drive for a similar price, but it doesnt feel right to waste a 500 gig drive on something that doesnt need. For me this was perfect.

Brad

So far, this SSD has worked pretty well for me, even though it’s no Evo Samsung 850. It was a fair amount cheaper though, had a little bit more extra storage than I needed for the task I required it for, and in my online research and looking around, it seemed to be decent enough and fast enough to fit my needs.Around 40 some bucks is what I recall paying for this, and it’s well worth it when i only needed a little more than half the storage space of this drive in the first place in an SSD form for my OS partition. It’s sped up my boot time form over a full minute, to a little over a half a minute as well, which is wonderful. I’ve seen, however, that other people can get up to 10-20 second boot speeds with a good SSD, but realized that it wasn’t the fault of this SSD, moreso the fault of the type of motherboard I am currently using.Installation wasn’t too difficult, if you know how to install any type of internal PC part. Even came with the parts required to attach it to a 3.5 HDD bay securely, which is nice, but did not include a spare SATA cable. However, that was fine for me, since I had a spare SATA III laying around.So far I haven’t had any problems, but I’ve only had it for about 2 months at most at this point, and not under heavy usage. (Like I said, it’s used for my OS, and a few of my more heftier games and apps at this point). Hopefully though, it will last a while.

Vance Dance

Support Taiwan! If you’re looking for 10 year reliability, go for MLC Flash SSD370S with DRAM cache. If on a budget, get this 3D TLC SSD220S without DRAM cache. Only trust Transcend, you won’t regret it.

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