Budal Black Opal NV7400 SSD Review

Published:

You can’t convince me otherwise; SSDs are now the only technological arena that does not seem to stagnate. This is one of the elements that constantly bursts the trend in terms of constant development and up. Yes, they utilize high-priced technologies every year, and the flagship disks break down every two and a half seconds (just look at WD SN8100 to get a perfect example of this). But consistently, again and again, prices are still falling beyond inflation. And in my eyes it is much more vital than anything else. It is here, Black Black Opal NV7400, is the personification, the image of this concept itself.

I’m going to go out with it. For 2 TB travel, in the US you pay 120 USD for it. One hundred and twenty bucks for 2000 GB of pure memory PCIe 4.0. It’s six cents for gigabytes. By far the cheapest drive I tested last year. The only ones who even approach remotely are boys with a larger capacity, such as WD 8 TB SN850X or their own basic P310, but even then they are even higher than this compact number per concert. The best SSD budget? Well, stick to only a moment when I reveal good things and then you can make a decision.

- Advertisement -

So background information first: what the hell is this a thing? Budy, as you can, but does not have to, is a relatively up-to-date child in a block of flats, at least in terms of western audience. He comes from Shenzhen in China and was founded in 2010 (although according to some reports it has a history extending until 1996). He focused mainly on flash memory solutions and several other products, and well, that’s it.

Recently, Biwin debuted a lot of more SSD and memory consumer -oriented consumer. Two months ago I reviewed his latest PCIe 5.0, X570 Pro solution, which was packed by the legendary SM2508 SM2508 controller with always justified 232-layer NAND, providing intriguing results. NV7400, however, is a much more profitable drive. One who, maybe understandable, had to snail-paced down a few turns to make a cut, because boy, boy, or is affordable.

Bink Black Opal NV7400 specifications

Black Black Opal NV7400 SSD from the packaging and installed on the computer.

(Image loan: future)

Capacity: 2 TB
Interface: Pci 4.0 x4
Memory controller: Maxiotk map1602a Falcon Lite Gen4
Flash memory: Micron or YMTC 232-layer TLC NAND
Efficiency evaluated: 7400 Mb/s Durable reading, 6500 Mb/s Durable record
Resilience: 2000 TBW
Guarantee: Five years
Price: 120 USD £ 108

When it comes to internal equipment, this is where things become a bit challenging. In the case of the BiWin controller, Maxiotk MAP1602A Falcon Lite Gen4 (what a name). It is without a dramatic unit produced using a 12 Nm TSMC process and is built from the back of the 32-bit Cortex R5 architecture, containing a four-channel structure. Fair enough.

Nand – Well, that’s where the confusion lies. According to some sales points, the disk is available in two different NAND configurations. Instead, using the 232-layer TLC Micron or 232-layer TLC YMTC. Dryto are renamed as part of their own camping naming program, which hinders identification.

Despite this, the header specifications are quite juicy. Constant reading and recording speeds are advertised at 7400 Mb/SI 6500 Mb/s, respectively; It is equipped with a stunning 2000 TBW strength assessment; And, of course, everything is packed in this unilateral design, thanks to which it is widely compatible with virtually everything that can accommodate SSD PCIe 4.0 M.2-2280.

Pc gamer test bench
CPU: AMD Ryzen 9 9900X | ARIES: 64 GB (2x32GB) Team group T-Create Expert DDR5 @ 6000 C34 | GPU: Nvidia GeForce RTX 4080 Super | Motherboard: ASUS ROG STRIX X870E-E Gaming WiFi/NZXT N9 X870E | CUP COOLER: Asus Rog Rejujin III 360 Argb Extreme | Dog: 1200W NZXT C1200 (2024) 80+ Gold | Chassis: Geometric future model 5

Now that the drama is out of the way, let’s talk about the numbers here. The good news is that the sequences are solid for the 4.0 drive. These results are not perfectly used, but Crystal Disk Mark gives a respectable numbers by just 7370 Mb/SW reading and 6336 Mb/SW record. Not bad under any circumstances.

However, less impressive are those that disappoint random 4K results. Reading is fine, 75 Mb/s, almost equal to the most contemporary disk at this level, but the magazine appeared on average only 229 Mb/s (with the highest registered result of this drive for 231 Mb/s). It is seriously low, 60-70 Mb/s lower than most disks in 4.0 and 5.0 standards. 3DMark similarly showed a fairly mediocre trip, with a result of only 2757, probably for a combination of a fairly low bandwidth and a snail-paced 65 NS during access. However, in the Final Fantasy XIV XIV Shadowbringers industry, Budin managed to buy back with a solid 7.398 second show.

Compared to my other favorite budget pursuit, the key P310 (which, although it contains a 232-layer Nand Micron, sequential results are quite similar, but overcomes NV7400 in virtually every other test, including these random 4KS. At least the whole belt, and this is the temperature.

Buy if …

✅ You are after the best bang for SSD Buck: You have a confined budget; At an extremely low price for 2 TB, NV7400 can simply be the best value you can get.

Don’t buy if …

❌ You appreciate the random 4K performance: You are aimed at reaching the highest level and you want a coherent SSD disk that breaks the game of playing the game no matter what.

Even with a slightly higher environment, NV7400 beat him to hit, with a maximum short-lived recording of only 48 degrees Celsius. It’s radically low. Combine it with this Chonky Endurance and its unilateral project, and if you are looking for good practical SSDs for something like PS5, it is a very tempting offer.

To put it, this disk is not standing out in terms of pure raw grunting. It is not. There are now much better SSDs, even budget. For example, a huge number of Phison E31T drives can confirm this; The key P510 certainly comes to mind, but of course you also have MP700 Elite Corsair or Exteria Plus G4. And of course, there are also high results on the PCIe 4.0 wagon, with black SN7100 WD far above its weight class. We are spoiled by a choice.

However, what everyone does not do in the case of disks directed at this market is really closed at the budget price. This is a constantly falling NAND value. Regardless of whether this applies to larger profit margins or what is challenging to say, but the NV7400 simply absolutely dominates this front compared to the rest and a compact amount. If you are looking for the best value, the longest SSD at the moment and do not worry about average performance, it has no equal. Yes, ok, he will not beat any discs here; This is not the best, but for many of us it is enough; We can ignore slightly slower synthetic results and simply enjoy the real speeds that Biwin provided here. At least if you get micron anyway.

WD_BLACK SN7100 SSD

The best SSD for games 2025

Related articles