Well it's not technically a HDD, I suppose ![]() But it’s not enough to spoil an otherwise highly appealing package. That’s a little off the pace of some alternatives. The only slight chink in the SE800’s armor is that sustained performance drops down to around 260MB/s after around 15GB of internal drive traffic. Performance-wise, in testing the Adata delivers in the headline 1GB/s spec for sequential transfers while notching up 4K random throughput that’s comparable to the competition at 21MB/s for reads and 40MB/s for writes. That makes it unique among these SSDs and, what’s more, given the competitive pricing you’re getting that IP rating effectively for free. ![]() It means the drive is rated as impervious to dust ingress and can survive immersion in up to 1.5 meters of water for 30 minutes. ![]() All very nice, but what is really unusual is the SE800’s IP68 rating, a characteristic hinted at by the pop-off cover over the USB Type-C port. The latter is typically slower and offers lower write endurance. It’s also nice to see that Adata has equipped the SE800 with TLC rather than QLC NAND memory.
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