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Sabrent’s XTRM-Q 16TB is vast, and very fast under some circumstances when used in RAID 0, but it’s extremely pricey and relies on your OS for RAID. Mac performance dropped quickly during long ...
The Sabrent Rocket XTRM-Q we have on the bench today sports 16TB of ultra-fast NVMe storage behind an Intel-certified Thunderbolt 3 interface. You read that right, sixteen terabytes.
In RAID 0 mode, the new Sabrent Rocket XTRM-Q 16TB external SSD boasts read speeds of up to 2.8GB/sec (2800MB/sec) and up to 1.4GB/sec (1400MB/sec) reads.
Computing accessory maker Sabrent has launched a new external SSD rocking two 8-TB drives that can be configured as separate data vaults or combined into one capacious solution to meet the growing ...
The new Sabrent Rocket XTRM-Q 16TB external SSD will soon be available to purchase worldwide priced at $2,900 for more information jump over to the Sabrent website by following the link below.
I suppose it's just not feasible (yet) to cram 16TB of NAND flash memory onto an M.2 drive with an NVMe interface (as pictured above, because Sabrent does not yet offer any 2.5-inch models).
The Sabrent Thunderbolt 3 dock with 16TB of SSD storage costs almost $3000—but buying a dock and 16TB of SSDs separately would cost even more.
The Sabrent dual NVME SSD docking station is available with up to 16TB of storage from Sabrent's website, starting at $499 for 2TB. As reviewed, the 8TB version sells for $1299.
This week Sabrent has unveiled a new addition to their range of PCIe4 m.2 NVMe SSD drives in the form of the 8TB Sabrent Rocket 4 Plus offering 7200MB/sec or 7.2GB/sec reads and 6900MB/sec or 6 ...
Sabrent has released a new Thunderbolt 3 dock, which includes up to 16TB of storage. The 2TB version of the docking station is listed for $499.99 on Sabrent’s site, opting for the full 16TB of ...
Sabrent teased its ridiculously high-capacity SSD earlier this year, and it looks like a release is imminent. The device, which at first glance looks like it belongs on our list of best graphics ...