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Yes I'm sure they are not that reliable. I know enough cases where ADATA SSDs died within the first 3 months of usage Like OS and Games. A quick search on the search engine you like for ADATA and dead SSD will give a point.

Main System:

Anghammarad : Asrock Taichi x570, AMD Ryzen 7 5800X @4900 MHz. 32 GB DDR4 3600, some NVME SSDs, Gainward Phoenix RTX 3070TI

 

System 2 "Igluna" AsRock Fatal1ty Z77 Pro, Core I5 3570k @4300, 16 GB Ram DDR3 2133, some SSD, and a 2 TB HDD each, Gainward Phantom 760GTX.

System 3 "Inskah" AsRock Fatal1ty Z77 Pro, Core I5 3570k @4300, 16 GB Ram DDR3 2133, some SSD, and a 2 TB HDD each, Gainward Phantom 760GTX.

 

On the Road: Acer Aspire 5 Model A515-51G-54FD, Intel Core i5 7200U, 8 GB DDR4 Ram, 120 GB SSD, 1 TB SSD, Intel CPU GFX and Nvidia MX 150, Full HD IPS display

 

Media System "Vio": Aorus Elite AX V2, Ryzen 7 5700X, 64 GB Ram DDR4 3200 Mushkin, 1 275 GB Crucial MX SSD, 1 tb Crucial MX500 SSD. IBM 5015 Megaraid, 4 Seagate Ironwolf 4TB HDD in raid 5, 4 WD RED 4 tb in another Raid 5, Gainward Phoenix GTX 1060

 

(Abit Fatal1ty FP9 IN SLI, C2Duo E8400, 6 GB Ram DDR2 800, far too less diskspace, Gainward Phantom 560 GTX broken need fixing)

 

Nostalgia: Amiga 1200, Tower Build, CPU/FPU/MMU 68EC020, 68030, 68882 @50 Mhz, 10 MByte ram (2 MB Chip, 8 MB Fast), Fast SCSI II, 2 CDRoms, 2 1 GB SCSI II IBM Harddrives, 512 MB Quantum Lightning HDD, self soldered Sync changer to attach VGA displays, WLAN

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1 minute ago, Anghammarad said:

Yes I'm sure they are not that reliable. I know enough cases where ADATA SSDs died within the first 3 months of usage Like OS and Games. A quick search on the search engine you like for ADATA and dead SSD will give a point.

Crap, ive built 2 pcs with this ssd as os drive.

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They are performant but then often tend to play peek a boo, without being seen again from the other computer parts like Bios of the Mobo etc.

 

A fast and good "specced" SSD is nice, as long it is alive. And that is the problem with the ADATA SSDs. They tend to not stay for the long haul.

 

 

Main System:

Anghammarad : Asrock Taichi x570, AMD Ryzen 7 5800X @4900 MHz. 32 GB DDR4 3600, some NVME SSDs, Gainward Phoenix RTX 3070TI

 

System 2 "Igluna" AsRock Fatal1ty Z77 Pro, Core I5 3570k @4300, 16 GB Ram DDR3 2133, some SSD, and a 2 TB HDD each, Gainward Phantom 760GTX.

System 3 "Inskah" AsRock Fatal1ty Z77 Pro, Core I5 3570k @4300, 16 GB Ram DDR3 2133, some SSD, and a 2 TB HDD each, Gainward Phantom 760GTX.

 

On the Road: Acer Aspire 5 Model A515-51G-54FD, Intel Core i5 7200U, 8 GB DDR4 Ram, 120 GB SSD, 1 TB SSD, Intel CPU GFX and Nvidia MX 150, Full HD IPS display

 

Media System "Vio": Aorus Elite AX V2, Ryzen 7 5700X, 64 GB Ram DDR4 3200 Mushkin, 1 275 GB Crucial MX SSD, 1 tb Crucial MX500 SSD. IBM 5015 Megaraid, 4 Seagate Ironwolf 4TB HDD in raid 5, 4 WD RED 4 tb in another Raid 5, Gainward Phoenix GTX 1060

 

(Abit Fatal1ty FP9 IN SLI, C2Duo E8400, 6 GB Ram DDR2 800, far too less diskspace, Gainward Phantom 560 GTX broken need fixing)

 

Nostalgia: Amiga 1200, Tower Build, CPU/FPU/MMU 68EC020, 68030, 68882 @50 Mhz, 10 MByte ram (2 MB Chip, 8 MB Fast), Fast SCSI II, 2 CDRoms, 2 1 GB SCSI II IBM Harddrives, 512 MB Quantum Lightning HDD, self soldered Sync changer to attach VGA displays, WLAN

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3 minutes ago, Anghammarad said:

Yes I'm sure they are not that reliable. I know enough cases where ADATA SSDs died within the first 3 months of usage Like OS and Games. A quick search on the search engine you like for ADATA and dead SSD will give a point.

theres nothing wrong with backing up with your hardrive. and with the price of under $75!!! its easy to replace.

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1 minute ago, Anghammarad said:

They are performant but then often tend to play peek a boo, without being seen again from the other computer parts like Bios of the Mobo etc.

 

 

 

Just now, Samson_ST said:

theres nothing wrong with backing up with your hardrive. and with the price of under $75!!! its easy to replace.

read that ^^^^

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*head desk* 

 

sure nothing wrong to start over and have an RMA every now and then, wait for the repaired one to arrive, reinstall everything etc... I'm sure there are people out there who love those things. 

 

I can only tell for my part, like reliable parts. I don't like to replace parts every now and then. That's how I pick the parts for my systems and usually, except a few Maxtor HDDs and one dead GPU fan and an aged psu, never had issues until I swapped everything out to something more performant.

Main System:

Anghammarad : Asrock Taichi x570, AMD Ryzen 7 5800X @4900 MHz. 32 GB DDR4 3600, some NVME SSDs, Gainward Phoenix RTX 3070TI

 

System 2 "Igluna" AsRock Fatal1ty Z77 Pro, Core I5 3570k @4300, 16 GB Ram DDR3 2133, some SSD, and a 2 TB HDD each, Gainward Phantom 760GTX.

System 3 "Inskah" AsRock Fatal1ty Z77 Pro, Core I5 3570k @4300, 16 GB Ram DDR3 2133, some SSD, and a 2 TB HDD each, Gainward Phantom 760GTX.

 

On the Road: Acer Aspire 5 Model A515-51G-54FD, Intel Core i5 7200U, 8 GB DDR4 Ram, 120 GB SSD, 1 TB SSD, Intel CPU GFX and Nvidia MX 150, Full HD IPS display

 

Media System "Vio": Aorus Elite AX V2, Ryzen 7 5700X, 64 GB Ram DDR4 3200 Mushkin, 1 275 GB Crucial MX SSD, 1 tb Crucial MX500 SSD. IBM 5015 Megaraid, 4 Seagate Ironwolf 4TB HDD in raid 5, 4 WD RED 4 tb in another Raid 5, Gainward Phoenix GTX 1060

 

(Abit Fatal1ty FP9 IN SLI, C2Duo E8400, 6 GB Ram DDR2 800, far too less diskspace, Gainward Phantom 560 GTX broken need fixing)

 

Nostalgia: Amiga 1200, Tower Build, CPU/FPU/MMU 68EC020, 68030, 68882 @50 Mhz, 10 MByte ram (2 MB Chip, 8 MB Fast), Fast SCSI II, 2 CDRoms, 2 1 GB SCSI II IBM Harddrives, 512 MB Quantum Lightning HDD, self soldered Sync changer to attach VGA displays, WLAN

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1 minute ago, Anghammarad said:

Yes I'm sure they are not that reliable. I know enough cases where ADATA SSDs died within the first 3 months of usage Like OS and Games. A quick search on the search engine you like for ADATA and dead SSD will give a point.

What could i use instead?

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1 minute ago, Anghammarad said:

*head desk* 

 

sure nothing wrong to start over and have an RMA every now and then, wait for the repaired one to arrive, reinstall everything etc... I'm sure there are people out there who love those things. 

 

I can only tell for my part, like reliable parts. I don't like to replace parts every now and then. That's how I pick the parts for my systems and usually, except a few Maxtor HDDs and one dead GPU fan and an aged psu, never had issues until I swapped everything out to something more performant.

first i wasn't talking about repairing one. i was talking about installing a software were it backs ups your ssd (or you can do it manually) and saves your files on a hard drive, and when the 'supposedly faulty designed' ssd breaks spend less than $75 bucks on a new one. 128gb or less inst that much to back up when there are 1TB hard drives.

 

secondly, i like reliable part as much as anyone does. but reliability isn't the only variable to compare parts.

Consider this. (WITHOUT A BIAS REVIEW)

(Cheap - Great Performance - Semi Reliable) vs (More expensive - Less Performance - More Reliable)

you see when comparing products before buying, there are more variables to look at. and thats what make a build unique. this guy has a budget, so he has a performance per dollar comparison and the A-Data SSD Ultimate SU800 128GB SATAIII ASU800SS-128GT-C was the best pick .

 

So In conclusion to your response. ***Head bashing against table and is on the brink of splitting***

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1 minute ago, Hipperpyah said:

What could i use instead?

A crucial mx 300 275 gig for example costs around 80-90 bucks. (first search on Amazon where I live). Yes 10-20 bucks more than the 128 ADATA but even so double the space and more reliable.

Main System:

Anghammarad : Asrock Taichi x570, AMD Ryzen 7 5800X @4900 MHz. 32 GB DDR4 3600, some NVME SSDs, Gainward Phoenix RTX 3070TI

 

System 2 "Igluna" AsRock Fatal1ty Z77 Pro, Core I5 3570k @4300, 16 GB Ram DDR3 2133, some SSD, and a 2 TB HDD each, Gainward Phantom 760GTX.

System 3 "Inskah" AsRock Fatal1ty Z77 Pro, Core I5 3570k @4300, 16 GB Ram DDR3 2133, some SSD, and a 2 TB HDD each, Gainward Phantom 760GTX.

 

On the Road: Acer Aspire 5 Model A515-51G-54FD, Intel Core i5 7200U, 8 GB DDR4 Ram, 120 GB SSD, 1 TB SSD, Intel CPU GFX and Nvidia MX 150, Full HD IPS display

 

Media System "Vio": Aorus Elite AX V2, Ryzen 7 5700X, 64 GB Ram DDR4 3200 Mushkin, 1 275 GB Crucial MX SSD, 1 tb Crucial MX500 SSD. IBM 5015 Megaraid, 4 Seagate Ironwolf 4TB HDD in raid 5, 4 WD RED 4 tb in another Raid 5, Gainward Phoenix GTX 1060

 

(Abit Fatal1ty FP9 IN SLI, C2Duo E8400, 6 GB Ram DDR2 800, far too less diskspace, Gainward Phantom 560 GTX broken need fixing)

 

Nostalgia: Amiga 1200, Tower Build, CPU/FPU/MMU 68EC020, 68030, 68882 @50 Mhz, 10 MByte ram (2 MB Chip, 8 MB Fast), Fast SCSI II, 2 CDRoms, 2 1 GB SCSI II IBM Harddrives, 512 MB Quantum Lightning HDD, self soldered Sync changer to attach VGA displays, WLAN

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21 minutes ago, Anghammarad said:

*head desk* 

 

sure nothing wrong to start over and have an RMA every now and then, wait for the repaired one to arrive, reinstall everything etc... I'm sure there are people out there who love those things. 

 

I can only tell for my part, like reliable parts. I don't like to replace parts every now and then. That's how I pick the parts for my systems and usually, except a few Maxtor HDDs and one dead GPU fan and an aged psu, never had issues until I swapped everything out to something more performant.

 

6 minutes ago, Samson_ST said:

first i wasn't talking about repairing one. i was talking about installing a software were it backs ups your ssd (or you can do it manually) and saves your files on a hard drive, and when the 'supposedly faulty designed' ssd breaks spend less than $75 bucks on a new one. 128gb or less inst that much to back up when there are 1TB hard drives.

 

secondly, i like reliable part as much as anyone does. but reliability isn't the only variable to compare parts.

Consider this. (WITHOUT A BIAS REVIEW)

(Cheap - Great Performance - Semi Reliable) vs (More expensive - Less Performance - More Reliable)

you see when comparing products before buying, there are more variables to look at. and thats what make a build unique. this guy has a budget, so he has a performance per dollar comparison and the A-Data SSD Ultimate SU800 128GB SATAIII ASU800SS-128GT-C was the best pick .

 

So In conclusion to your response. ***Head bashing against table and is on the brink of splitting***

READ THAT ^^^^^^

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4 minutes ago, Samson_ST said:

first i wasn't talking about repairing one. i was talking about installing a software were it backs ups your ssd (or you can do it manually) and saves your files on a hard drive, and when the 'supposedly faulty designed' ssd breaks spend less than $75 bucks on a new one. 128gb or less inst that much to back up when there are 1TB hard drives.

 

secondly, i like reliable part as much as anyone does. but reliability isn't the only variable to compare parts.

Consider this. (WITHOUT A BIAS REVIEW)

(Cheap - Great Performance - Semi Reliable) vs (More expensive - Less Performance - More Reliable)

you see when comparing products before buying, there are more variables to look at. and thats what make a build unique. this guy has a budget, so he has a performance per dollar comparison and the A-Data SSD Ultimate SU800 128GB SATAIII ASU800SS-128GT-C was the best pick .

 

So In conclusion to your response. ***Head bashing against table and is on the brink of splitting***

 

Sure but why, really why go through all the trouble when this isn't really needed.

 

Yes backups fine, yes buy a new one fine, yes do RMA and get a swap fine... but all this compared to the money saved, which it isn't if you count the work time in setting everything back up, not able to use the machine for that time etc, then 10 or 20 bucks more should be well worth it. Even more when it's a later addition. 

 

 

Main System:

Anghammarad : Asrock Taichi x570, AMD Ryzen 7 5800X @4900 MHz. 32 GB DDR4 3600, some NVME SSDs, Gainward Phoenix RTX 3070TI

 

System 2 "Igluna" AsRock Fatal1ty Z77 Pro, Core I5 3570k @4300, 16 GB Ram DDR3 2133, some SSD, and a 2 TB HDD each, Gainward Phantom 760GTX.

System 3 "Inskah" AsRock Fatal1ty Z77 Pro, Core I5 3570k @4300, 16 GB Ram DDR3 2133, some SSD, and a 2 TB HDD each, Gainward Phantom 760GTX.

 

On the Road: Acer Aspire 5 Model A515-51G-54FD, Intel Core i5 7200U, 8 GB DDR4 Ram, 120 GB SSD, 1 TB SSD, Intel CPU GFX and Nvidia MX 150, Full HD IPS display

 

Media System "Vio": Aorus Elite AX V2, Ryzen 7 5700X, 64 GB Ram DDR4 3200 Mushkin, 1 275 GB Crucial MX SSD, 1 tb Crucial MX500 SSD. IBM 5015 Megaraid, 4 Seagate Ironwolf 4TB HDD in raid 5, 4 WD RED 4 tb in another Raid 5, Gainward Phoenix GTX 1060

 

(Abit Fatal1ty FP9 IN SLI, C2Duo E8400, 6 GB Ram DDR2 800, far too less diskspace, Gainward Phantom 560 GTX broken need fixing)

 

Nostalgia: Amiga 1200, Tower Build, CPU/FPU/MMU 68EC020, 68030, 68882 @50 Mhz, 10 MByte ram (2 MB Chip, 8 MB Fast), Fast SCSI II, 2 CDRoms, 2 1 GB SCSI II IBM Harddrives, 512 MB Quantum Lightning HDD, self soldered Sync changer to attach VGA displays, WLAN

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3 minutes ago, Anghammarad said:

 

Sure but why, really why go through all the trouble when this isn't really needed.

 

Yes backups fine, yes buy a new one fine, yes do RMA and get a swap fine... but all this compared to the money saved, which it isn't if you count the work time in setting everything back up, not able to use the machine for that time etc, then 10 or 20 bucks more should be well worth it. Even more when it's a later addition. 

 

 

 

3 minutes ago, Samson_ST said:

 

 

READ THAT ^^^^^^

Cant buy any of these ssd in latvia only got crucial 250 gb but i dont need 250 :D

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Just now, Anghammarad said:

 

Sure but why, really why go through all the trouble when this isn't really needed.

 

Yes backups fine, yes buy a new one fine, yes do RMA and get a swap fine... but all this compared to the money saved, which it isn't if you count the work time in setting everything back up, not able to use the machine for that time etc, then 10 or 20 bucks more should be well worth it. Even more when it's a later addition. 

 

 

quoting you: 'Yes backups fine, yes buy a new one fine, yes do RMA and get a swap fine... but all this compared to the money saved'. let me tell you back ups are common and back ups should be common for you to. For anybody, no amount of money is worth there work on a hard drive. So if any body back ups there work, the last varible left is the cost. '10 to 20 bucks difference' you say. mmmmm let me think its the difference between having a brain and not having a brain.

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1 minute ago, Samson_ST said:

 

 

READ THAT ^^^^^^

read that and still can't think about why someone, to save 10 or 20 bucks, would by cheap with the "sure" option of lots of trouble. There is absolutely no reason.

 

Yes I can hammer together cheap stuff and sell it to customers who just look at the price tag. Then have lots of joy with them never coming back or shouting at me.

Or I could go and ask about budget and use from what they want and build something reliable and performant and hand that over.

 

There is an old saying. "Buying cheap always means buying twice" ... Same with PSUs... hey there is a 1000 watts for 50 bucks, and then there is a 1000 watts for 150 bucks. The chance of frying your whole machine is given to a very high chance with the 50 bucks one.

Main System:

Anghammarad : Asrock Taichi x570, AMD Ryzen 7 5800X @4900 MHz. 32 GB DDR4 3600, some NVME SSDs, Gainward Phoenix RTX 3070TI

 

System 2 "Igluna" AsRock Fatal1ty Z77 Pro, Core I5 3570k @4300, 16 GB Ram DDR3 2133, some SSD, and a 2 TB HDD each, Gainward Phantom 760GTX.

System 3 "Inskah" AsRock Fatal1ty Z77 Pro, Core I5 3570k @4300, 16 GB Ram DDR3 2133, some SSD, and a 2 TB HDD each, Gainward Phantom 760GTX.

 

On the Road: Acer Aspire 5 Model A515-51G-54FD, Intel Core i5 7200U, 8 GB DDR4 Ram, 120 GB SSD, 1 TB SSD, Intel CPU GFX and Nvidia MX 150, Full HD IPS display

 

Media System "Vio": Aorus Elite AX V2, Ryzen 7 5700X, 64 GB Ram DDR4 3200 Mushkin, 1 275 GB Crucial MX SSD, 1 tb Crucial MX500 SSD. IBM 5015 Megaraid, 4 Seagate Ironwolf 4TB HDD in raid 5, 4 WD RED 4 tb in another Raid 5, Gainward Phoenix GTX 1060

 

(Abit Fatal1ty FP9 IN SLI, C2Duo E8400, 6 GB Ram DDR2 800, far too less diskspace, Gainward Phantom 560 GTX broken need fixing)

 

Nostalgia: Amiga 1200, Tower Build, CPU/FPU/MMU 68EC020, 68030, 68882 @50 Mhz, 10 MByte ram (2 MB Chip, 8 MB Fast), Fast SCSI II, 2 CDRoms, 2 1 GB SCSI II IBM Harddrives, 512 MB Quantum Lightning HDD, self soldered Sync changer to attach VGA displays, WLAN

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2 minutes ago, Hipperpyah said:

 

Cant buy any of these ssd in latvia only got crucial 250 gb but i dont need 250 :D

Than try to look for SANDISK or Corsair. 

Main System:

Anghammarad : Asrock Taichi x570, AMD Ryzen 7 5800X @4900 MHz. 32 GB DDR4 3600, some NVME SSDs, Gainward Phoenix RTX 3070TI

 

System 2 "Igluna" AsRock Fatal1ty Z77 Pro, Core I5 3570k @4300, 16 GB Ram DDR3 2133, some SSD, and a 2 TB HDD each, Gainward Phantom 760GTX.

System 3 "Inskah" AsRock Fatal1ty Z77 Pro, Core I5 3570k @4300, 16 GB Ram DDR3 2133, some SSD, and a 2 TB HDD each, Gainward Phantom 760GTX.

 

On the Road: Acer Aspire 5 Model A515-51G-54FD, Intel Core i5 7200U, 8 GB DDR4 Ram, 120 GB SSD, 1 TB SSD, Intel CPU GFX and Nvidia MX 150, Full HD IPS display

 

Media System "Vio": Aorus Elite AX V2, Ryzen 7 5700X, 64 GB Ram DDR4 3200 Mushkin, 1 275 GB Crucial MX SSD, 1 tb Crucial MX500 SSD. IBM 5015 Megaraid, 4 Seagate Ironwolf 4TB HDD in raid 5, 4 WD RED 4 tb in another Raid 5, Gainward Phoenix GTX 1060

 

(Abit Fatal1ty FP9 IN SLI, C2Duo E8400, 6 GB Ram DDR2 800, far too less diskspace, Gainward Phantom 560 GTX broken need fixing)

 

Nostalgia: Amiga 1200, Tower Build, CPU/FPU/MMU 68EC020, 68030, 68882 @50 Mhz, 10 MByte ram (2 MB Chip, 8 MB Fast), Fast SCSI II, 2 CDRoms, 2 1 GB SCSI II IBM Harddrives, 512 MB Quantum Lightning HDD, self soldered Sync changer to attach VGA displays, WLAN

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1 minute ago, Anghammarad said:

read that and still can't think about why someone, to save 10 or 20 bucks, would by cheap with the "sure" option of lots of trouble. There is absolutely no reason.

 

Yes I can hammer together cheap stuff and sell it to customers who just look at the price tag. Then have lots of joy with them never coming back or shouting at me.

Or I could go and ask about budget and use from what they want and build something reliable and performant and hand that over.

 

There is an old saying. "Buying cheap always means buying twice" ... Same with PSUs... hey there is a 1000 watts for 50 bucks, and then there is a 1000 watts for 150 bucks. The chance of frying your whole machine is given to a very high chance with the 50 bucks one.

the analogy of the psu is poor. if a ssd breaks, it doesn't fry your whole machine, you lose your files. and if you back up there is no problems.

secondly for us to go on with this debate i need proof that this adata ssd is faulty .

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For reliability with ADATA SSD, just browse a few customer feedbacks. Thats more than enough. Disregarding such like "I microwaved it to dry it after I spilled my beer hurr hurr and it wouldn't boot" stuff... just the plain "got it because it looked good for the prize, dead within a short time" rezessions.

 

And all my coworkers, "friends" that started out with an ADATA to came in cussing about their machine not working anymore, not finding the boot drive (which was the ADATA) 

 

Again, I hold ADATA against all bad mouthing regarding their RAMs and even some of their spinning USB drives. But they really lack in reliability when it comes to SSDs. I'm sad that it is like it is, I would love to use more of ADATA because they astounded my with their RAMs for many years form the compatibility, performance and price point of view. For example I haven't seen any consumer motherboard which didn't run on ADATA Rams even the most troubling boards like ASUS Sabertooth edition in the beginning.

Main System:

Anghammarad : Asrock Taichi x570, AMD Ryzen 7 5800X @4900 MHz. 32 GB DDR4 3600, some NVME SSDs, Gainward Phoenix RTX 3070TI

 

System 2 "Igluna" AsRock Fatal1ty Z77 Pro, Core I5 3570k @4300, 16 GB Ram DDR3 2133, some SSD, and a 2 TB HDD each, Gainward Phantom 760GTX.

System 3 "Inskah" AsRock Fatal1ty Z77 Pro, Core I5 3570k @4300, 16 GB Ram DDR3 2133, some SSD, and a 2 TB HDD each, Gainward Phantom 760GTX.

 

On the Road: Acer Aspire 5 Model A515-51G-54FD, Intel Core i5 7200U, 8 GB DDR4 Ram, 120 GB SSD, 1 TB SSD, Intel CPU GFX and Nvidia MX 150, Full HD IPS display

 

Media System "Vio": Aorus Elite AX V2, Ryzen 7 5700X, 64 GB Ram DDR4 3200 Mushkin, 1 275 GB Crucial MX SSD, 1 tb Crucial MX500 SSD. IBM 5015 Megaraid, 4 Seagate Ironwolf 4TB HDD in raid 5, 4 WD RED 4 tb in another Raid 5, Gainward Phoenix GTX 1060

 

(Abit Fatal1ty FP9 IN SLI, C2Duo E8400, 6 GB Ram DDR2 800, far too less diskspace, Gainward Phantom 560 GTX broken need fixing)

 

Nostalgia: Amiga 1200, Tower Build, CPU/FPU/MMU 68EC020, 68030, 68882 @50 Mhz, 10 MByte ram (2 MB Chip, 8 MB Fast), Fast SCSI II, 2 CDRoms, 2 1 GB SCSI II IBM Harddrives, 512 MB Quantum Lightning HDD, self soldered Sync changer to attach VGA displays, WLAN

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FIVE STARS

ByChrison May 22, 2017
ByNicholas C.on May 21, 2017
Bykjm8888on May 17, 2017
ByHCBon May 16, 2017
ByCaesar E.on May 15, 2017
I literately pressed most recent and these are the top 5
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20 minutes ago, Anghammarad said:

For reliability with ADATA SSD, just browse a few customer feedbacks. Thats more than enough. Disregarding such like "I microwaved it to dry it after I spilled my beer hurr hurr and it wouldn't boot" stuff... just the plain "got it because it looked good for the prize, dead within a short time" rezessions.

 

And all my coworkers, "friends" that started out with an ADATA to came in cussing about their machine not working anymore, not finding the boot drive (which was the ADATA) 

 

Again, I hold ADATA against all bad mouthing regarding their RAMs and even some of their spinning USB drives. But they really lack in reliability when it comes to SSDs. I'm sad that it is like it is, I would love to use more of ADATA because they astounded my with their RAMs for many years form the compatibility, performance and price point of view. For example I haven't seen any consumer motherboard which didn't run on ADATA Rams even the most troubling boards like ASUS Sabertooth edition in the beginning.

 

Just now, Samson_ST said:

FIVE STARS

ByChrison May 22, 2017
ByNicholas C.on May 21, 2017
Bykjm8888on May 17, 2017
ByHCBon May 16, 2017
ByCaesar E.on May 15, 2017
I literately pressed most recent and these are the top 5

most recent amazon customer review, copied and paste, no order just happy customers

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https://linustechtips.com/topic/783492-cpu-upgrade/page/2/#findComment-9875852
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