Crucial P5 500GB Review (Page 8 of 11)

Page 8 - Benchmark: PassMark PerformanceTest 10

About PassMark PerformanceTest 10

This Advanced Disk Test, which is part of PerformanceTest, measures the data transfer speed when reading or writing data to one or more disks. The speed that data can be transferred between memory and a hard disk drive is one of a system's most important performance aspects. There are quite a few factors which have a bearing on this speed and the Advanced Disk Drive Test allows the user to vary most of these factors and compare the results.

The test supports any drive that can be mounted under Windows. Including IDE drives, SCSI, RAID, USB key drives, SATA, networked shared drives and external drives.

Users have the ability to test multiple drives at the same time using multiple threads, and specify:

- The size of the test file used. Larger files mean that the system cache has less of an effect on the test types, which use caching (see below).
- The size of the data block used for each read or write request. Larger blocks mean less requests and can lead to an improvement in performance.
- The choice of four access methods - C/C++ API, Win32 API cached / uncached and raw disk access.
- Sequential or random access (seeking plus reading and writing)
- Synchronous and Asynchronous access
- The split between reading and writing

The results of all completed tests may be graphed using our custom graphing components.

From: Developer's Page




PassMark PerformanceTest 10's Advanced Disk Test generates some awesome graphs right out of the box. It also provides valuable insight in simulating real world performance applications. To make things clear to you, the first graph simulates a database server, followed by a file server, web server, and workstation. Drives with high sequential read and write performance will do well in PassMark PerformanceTest 10. However, it also requires high IOPS capabilities for the best score, and as such, results for hard disk drives will prove to be very relevant.

Overall, the Crucial P5 500GB performance was quite excellent here. With results of 279.95MB/s, 1897MB/s, 2092MB/s, and 149.16MB/s, these results were notably higher than the other Crucial SSDs we have seen. Compared to the Crucial P2 500GB, which had numbers of 218.57MB/s, 1585MB/s, 1835MB/s, and 146.73MB/s, the P5 showed notably improvements in three of the four tests. Compared to the Kingston KC2500 1TB, which had numbers of 215.52MB/s, 1261MB/s, 1607MB/s, and 201.03MB/s, our Crucial P5 was again faster in three of the four tests. Finally, the results here stomped the original Crucial P1 500GB's numbers of 121.08MB/s, 392.68MB/s, 593.74MB/s, and 90.75MB/s, showing improvement over previous generation drives.


Page Index
1. Introduction, Packaging, Specifications
2. A Closer Look, Test System
3. Benchmark: AIDA64 Disk Benchmark
4. Benchmark: ATTO Disk Benchmark
5. Benchmark: Crystal Disk Mark 6.0
6. Benchmark: HD Tach 3.0.1.0
7. Benchmark: HD Tune Pro 5.70
8. Benchmark: PassMark PerformanceTest 10
9. Benchmark: PCMark 7
10. Benchmark: PCMark 8
11. Conclusion