OCZ Vertex 4 Review (256GB, 512GB)
by Anand Lal Shimpi on April 4, 2012 9:00 AM ESTPower Consumption
The Vertex 4, similar to the Octane before it, consumes entirely too much power at idle. OCZ tells us that this is a known issue, also fixed in the next version of the firmware that should reduce bring it down to roughly 0.75W at idle. At ~1.3W today, the Vertex 4 would draw more power than many 5400RPM 2.5-inch hard drives at idle - something to keep in mind if you're planning on putting this thing into a notebook.
Under load however, the Vertex 4 does quite well. It's more power efficient than Samsung's SSD 830, while offering similar if not better write performance. If your aim is better battery life and not performance however, you may want to stick with one of the 3Gbps Intel drives instead.
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danwat1234 - Wednesday, January 21, 2015 - link
The Vertex 4 does have a Marvell controller, with Indilinx firmwareDenithor - Wednesday, April 4, 2012 - link
You seem to have forgotten Octane, 'the 1st time that ocz now owns the controller and firmware that goes into the product.'And, as far as I've heard, Intel was the only one to truly fix the BSOD associated with the SandForce controller. Others made improvements and reduced the frequency but Intel downright fixed it.
id_aaa - Wednesday, April 11, 2012 - link
I'm not buying a controlled, I'm buying an SSD, and they delivered a crappy SSD, why should I trust OCZ now?semo - Thursday, April 5, 2012 - link
Yep, OCZ are smiley and I won't buy a product from them as long as there are competitive alternatives. They still haven't issued a mass recall of their first 25nm drives which did not have as much capacity as per their specs. OCZ blamed it on Sandforce's RAISE technology and waited for customers to contact them before replacing the affected SSDs. No one knows how many of those duds were sold and how many were replaced.kristof007 - Thursday, April 5, 2012 - link
I've been using my Vertex 2 for just over 2 years now. 120GB model. Not a single hiccup. I'd call that fairly reliable.PaulSabey - Wednesday, February 27, 2013 - link
My 120gb Vertex 2 (bought March 2011) had been running without a hiccup for nearly two years. Then yesterday it just spontaneously failed (BIOS could not even see the drive as present). I guess you can think your drive is totally reliable .. until the moment it fails.Breach1337 - Saturday, April 7, 2012 - link
Same here.Vertex 3 owner - although a great product for months I had a unfit for purpose product, no support and no fix from OCZ and on top of that people were treated with utter condescending arrogance on the forums, asked to effectively troubleshoot the product and if you refused to do that you were not cooperating. Sorry, but never OCZ for me ever again.pattycake0147 - Wednesday, April 4, 2012 - link
I can live with the lower read speeds, but the power consumption is too high. That said if reliability holds up, sounds like I'll be getting a new drive this year.Great review Anand!
ViviTheMage - Wednesday, April 4, 2012 - link
If this was going in a laptop, MAYBE I would be concerned, but what's a few watts for some more tasty iops?pattycake0147 - Wednesday, April 4, 2012 - link
A laptop is exactly what I would like to use it for. Both of my desktops already have SSD/HDD combos.