Patriot Memory 'Evlvr' Thunderbolt 3 portable SSD boasts high transfer rates, power effici...

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Patriot Memory launched a new external storage device at CES, with the Evlvr Thunderbolt 3 Portable SSD boasting high writing and reading performance in a compact package, one that is also claimed to be power efficient as well as fast.




Inside the Evlvr Thunderbolt 3 Portable SSD is a Phison E8 PCIe controller, which Patriot claims allows the drive to be three times faster than traditional external solid state drives. Taking advantage of the vast bandwidth offered by Thunderbolt 3, the Evlvr is capable of sequential read speeds of up to 1,500 megabytes per second, and up to 1,000 megabytes per second in sequential writing speeds.

Externally, the Evlvr has a single LED indicator and a Thunderbolt 3 port on one end, with the rest of the surfaces left blank. The Thunderbolt 3 connection also provides the unit with its power, meaning it only requires a single cable for both power and data transfers, rather than needing separate cables.




Patriot will start selling the Evlvr, said by the firm to be an abbreviation of Evolver, from March via its own website and select retailers. The drive will be priced at $199.99 for the 256 gigabyte model, rising to $289.99 for 512 gigabytes, with the highest capacity 1 terabyte drive expected to sell at $489.99.

Patriot is the latest in a number of firms to recently start offering PCIe-based portable external drives that use Thunderbolt 3. The 40 gigabit per second bandwidth offered by the connection, as well as the high performance of the PCIe controller and included memory, makes such devices ideal for those needing extremely fast storage, such as for video editors storing projects and needing to access files quickly without first transferring them to the host computer.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 5
    Evlvr? More like an abbreviation of ridiculous. If they hadn't said what it was supposed to be, I'd have had no clue. Not a good start if people can't easily pronounce the name of your product.
    toysandmewlymbaconstang
  • Reply 2 of 5
    evilutionevilution Posts: 1,399member
    Evlvr? More like an abbreviation of ridiculous. If they hadn't said what it was supposed to be, I'd have had no clue. Not a good start if people can't easily pronounce the name of your product.
    So, you want them to write exactly what it is on the case of the unit, despite the fact that the retail packaging will have all of the details on it.
    Most people would be able to look at that box, see the capacity written on it and know it's a storage device.
  • Reply 3 of 5
    neilmneilm Posts: 987member
    The question is, does this device also support USB3 over its TB3 port?
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 4 of 5
    Mike WuertheleMike Wuerthele Posts: 6,861administrator
    neilm said:
    The question is, does this device also support USB3 over its TB3 port?
    It does not. The first devices with the new Intel chipset we should see in April or so.
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 5 of 5
    wlymwlym Posts: 102member
    Evlvr? More like an abbreviation of ridiculous. If they hadn't said what it was supposed to be, I'd have had no clue. Not a good start if people can't easily pronounce the name of your product.
    The name works well with that ugly 80s style logo.
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