Review: SanDisk Extreme V2 is the SSD we pack in our bags

Posted:
in Current Mac Hardware edited January 2021
The new SanDisk Extreme Portable SSD now features speedy NVMe media inside of its rubberized exterior that is well suited for on-the-go creatives with its compact size and carabiner anchor.

The SanDisk Extreme SSD is a great scratch disk
The SanDisk Extreme SSD is a great scratch disk


If you haven't heard the news, SSDs are the way to go. They're the it thing in storage these daysn and in recent years have continued to drop in price, increase in capacity, and shrink in size.

SanDisk has brought much of that innovation to the new Extreme Portable SSD.

Key specs

  • Up to 2TB in size

  • 256-bit AES hardware encryption

  • USB-C

  • Two meter drop protection

  • Grippy liquid silione exterior

  • 1050MB/s read and up to 1000MB/s write speeds

  • IP55 rating

  • 5-year warranty

  • USB 3.2 Gen 2 port
SanDisk has long been a go-to for photographers with its industry-leading line of SD and MicroSD cards. Lately, it has started to do more with its SSD line, all focusing on being compact, mobile, and reliable.

It's in that spirit that it has upgraded its popular Extreme Portable SSD.

A sizeable upgrade

In the prior-gen model, SanDisk was using a SATA SSD which capped out at 550MB per second. For this version, SanDisk moved to an NVMe drive, in line with the Extreme Pro Portable SSD. That move, combined with advancement to USB 3.2 Gen 2 has nearly doubled the performance, now capping at an advertised 1,050MB per second read speed and 1,000MB per second write speed.

I always travel with the SanDisk Extreme Pro SSD V2
I always travel with the SanDisk Extreme Pro SSD V2


SanDisk also moved from simple software encryption to full 256-bit AES hardware encryption, which is much more protective of the sensitive data stored within.

Finally, the warranty has been extended from three years to five. SanDisk expects the drive to be an investment that you will carry with you for work or leisure for years without worry.

Performance

To test, we connected our SanDisk Extreme Portable SSD to one of the four Thunderbolt 3 ports on our 2019 Mac Pro. This drive isn't Thunderbolt 3, but the Thunderbolt ports are compatible with USB-C at up to up to 10Gb per second, matching that of the drive.

Running the Blackmagic Disk Speed Test, we saw speeds around 930 megabytes per second for both the write and read speeds. The read speed did average slightly higher than the write speed, as to be expected.

Performance of the Extreme Pro SSD V2
Performance of the Extreme Pro SSD V2


What's even better is that those are sustained speeds, as it didn't start off high and then taper off, as we tend to see in drive tests. Those numbers are slightly down from the theoretical advertised speeds, but we are still very happy with those numbers. It is incredibly quick.

In a real-world test, we transferred a 7.71GB video file from our internal drive to the SSD. It only took a hair over 7 seconds to pull off, which equates to just slightly higher than our Blackmagic numbers.

We certainly won't complain about that.

We then wanted to test transferring a series of files, which tends to take longer. Moving 345 small items averaging around 1MB and measuring 480MB in total took under four seconds to complete.

Should you buy the SanDisk Extreme Portable SSD?

There's something ineffable about the SanDisk Extreme line of SSDs. Our world as Apple fans is made up of devices that are metal and glass and can at times feel cold.

SanDisk's SSDs don't mimic Apple with an aluminum exterior as many have, instead feeling warm and comfortable to hold. The clip on the corner gives an extra sense of physical security as it is clipped into (or onto) your bag.

The perfect portable drive?
The perfect portable drive?


Nearly every single thing was improved with the V2 of this drive. Better ports, faster speeds, longer warranty, stronger encryption.

The only things SanDisk kept was the design and durability, essentially the parts people loved.

Even though it looks the same, SanDisk made a minor quality of life improvement in increasing the size of the carabiner anchor hole, which makes it even easier to clip on to. The IP55 resistance remains unchanged which protects against dust as well as water jets from any angle.

There are several SSDs in this space that are comparably priced with the SanDisk Extreme, and it matches or exceeds the performance of almost all of them. Most still clock in at the speeds of the original SanDisk Extreme, around 540MB/s.

Editing video with the SanDisk Extreme SSD on our iPad Pro
Editing video with the SanDisk Extreme SSD on our iPad Pro


They also often lack the encryption, warranty, and durability SanDisk offers. If you need even greater performance than the Extreme Portable SSD V2 offers, SanDisk still has you covered with the Extreme Pro Portable SSD V2 which tops out at an advertised 2000MB/s.

We used our last generation SanDisk Extreme Pro for years. The USB-C connectivity is well-suited for any modern Mac as well as the iPad Pro and always allowed us to work on the go with ease.

The new Extreme has the same performance as the last-gen Pro model for less cash which is an all-around win in our books.

Pros
  • Wonderful compact form factor

  • Durable and rugged with drop protection and IP55 rating

  • Strong encryption

  • Carabiner clip is great for additional security

  • Huge improvement in speeds, nearly as high as advertised

  • USB-C cable and USB-A adapter included

  • Long 5-year warranty
Cons
  • Only one color option

Rating: 4.5 out of 5

The SanDisk Extreme V2 is available in 500GB and 1TB sizes at launch for $109 and $169 respectively. A 2TB configuration is arriving this holiday season.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 16
    jwdawsojwdawso Posts: 389member
    Can I use it as a boot drive?
  • Reply 2 of 16
    I think you are talking about Extreme v2 not the Extreme Pro v2. SanDisk Extreme Pro V2 has a 20Gbps bandwidth using USB C gen 2x2. The non-pro version however feature USB C Gen 2 with 10Gbps speed.
    Apple devices are not equipped with Gen 2x2, so USB speed is capped at 10Gbps.
    Your links in the end is correct though, pointing to the non-pro version.
  • Reply 3 of 16
    That is more expensive than a Samsung T7 drive when on sale (like it usually is) and I have a 2TB version connected to my computer right now. You can even pay $10 extra and get one with a fingerprint reader that unlocks when you touch it.
  • Reply 4 of 16
    dewmedewme Posts: 5,356member
    jwdawso said:
    Can I use it as a boot drive?
    I cannot think of a reason why not. I used the previous generation of this drive to boot my 2014 HDD only Mac mini for well over a year until I found a inexpensive way to install an internal M.2 NVMe SSD into the mini using the empty fusion SSD socket. 

    The only issue I encountered booting from the external usb3 drive was the difficult and tedious process of installing macOS upgrades. Normal startup and rebooting wasn’t an issue, but OS upgrades created a temporary boot volume as part of the multiple automatic rebooting sequence that did not respect the Startup Disk setting or even respond to the Option key being pressed. Long story short, every OS upgrade involved upgrading both bootable drives independently and having to reassert which drive to boot from. 

    Despite the issues that I encountered with the Mac mini case, using an external SSD as a boot drive turned an otherwise unusable machine with the world’s slowest hard disk into something that I could actually use. 

    The aesthetics on these SanDisk SSDs remind me of the Casio G-Shock watches, which I’ve always liked. I’ve always wondered why no one has done a smartphone with a similar rugged design aesthetic. Yeah, there are rugged cases to strap on to fragile glass and metal smartphones , but it’s not the same. 
    chia
  • Reply 5 of 16
    dewme said:
    jwdawso said:
    Can I use it as a boot drive?
    I cannot think of a reason why not. I used the previous generation of this drive to boot my 2014 HDD only Mac mini for well over a year until I found a inexpensive way to install an internal M.2 NVMe SSD into the mini using the empty fusion SSD socket. 

    The only issue I encountered booting from the external usb3 drive was the difficult and tedious process of installing macOS upgrades. Normal startup and rebooting wasn’t an issue, but OS upgrades created a temporary boot volume as part of the multiple automatic rebooting sequence that did not respect the Startup Disk setting or even respond to the Option key being pressed. Long story short, every OS upgrade involved upgrading both bootable drives independently and having to reassert which drive to boot from. 

    Despite the issues that I encountered with the Mac mini case, using an external SSD as a boot drive turned an otherwise unusable machine with the world’s slowest hard disk into something that I could actually use. 

    The aesthetics on these SanDisk SSDs remind me of the Casio G-Shock watches, which I’ve always liked. I’ve always wondered why no one has done a smartphone with a similar rugged design aesthetic. Yeah, there are rugged cases to strap on to fragile glass and metal smartphones , but it’s not the same. 
    Rugged phones have been done for years.  They're still made, but not very popular.  They're edge-case devices with not a lot of sales. https://www.techradar.com/best/best-rugged-smartphones ; Most consumers tend to want sleek and pretty.  They also tend to want known brand names.  None of those linked phones are well known brands.
    Samsung has their XCover Pro line geared towards businesses.  https://www.samsung.com/us/business/products/mobile/phones/galaxy-xcover-pro/ ; Again, niche product.
    They used to make an "Active" version along with the regular version of their flagship S line.  They did it for the S4 through the S8.  Rumor has it they may revive the "Active" version.  S8 Active below.
    Samsung Galaxy S8 Active Price in Dominica July 2020  Specifications DM
    muthuk_vanalingam
  • Reply 6 of 16
    ivanhivanh Posts: 597member
    The recyclable plastic surface will unlikely survive for 5 years before getting sticky. Is it under warranty?
  • Reply 7 of 16
    entropysentropys Posts: 4,163member
    How is this better than the Samsung equivalent?
  • Reply 8 of 16
    macguimacgui Posts: 2,357member
    I think you are talking about Extreme v2 not the Extreme Pro v2. SanDisk Extreme Pro V2 has a 20Gbps bandwidth using USB C gen 2x2. The non-pro version however feature USB C Gen 2 with 10Gbps speed.
    No, AI is talking about the SanDisk Extreme Pro Portable SSD SDSSDE80-1T00-G25, but not the V2, which is double the performance.

    https://shop.westerndigital.com/products/portable-drives/sandisk-extreme-pro-usb-3-1-ssd#SDSSDE80-1T00-A25

    https://documents.westerndigital.com/content/dam/doc-library/en_us/assets/public/sandisk/product/portable-drives/extreme-pro-usb-3-1-ssd/data-sheet-extreme-pro-usb-3-1-ssd.pdf


    Your links in the end is correct though, pointing to the non-pro version.
    Again, no. If the SanDisk is 1050Mb/s then it is the Extreme Pro, just not the V2 Pro. I'm not sure I trust the Amazon links as the product number in AI's link is different than that of the manufacturer below:

    https://www.amazon.com/SanDisk-Extreme-Portable-External-SDSSDE80-1T00-A25/dp/B07YFGSDQR?ref_=ast_sto_dp

    The product number in AI's link to Amazon (SDSSDE61-1T00-G25) may be unique to Amazon, as is often the practice.

    A trip to the manufacturer's site show several different models, but no V2 as yet. I suspect it's too new, though there are reviews of it elsewhere. It's closer to $300, depending on what you read.

    I'll leave it to those curious about the Samsung product to do their own research.


    tmay
  • Reply 9 of 16
    macguimacgui Posts: 2,357member

    jwdawso said:
    Can I use it as a boot drive?
    Yes, properly formatted of course, you can but with a possible caveat. I did this with the 1T version and it gets very warm, as all NVMe drives do. But its case doesn't have the heatsink area of other cases and the top is covered in a rubber compound.

    I'm just not sure if this would survive as your daily driver boot drive, but should certainly be fine for your troubleshooting kit. I may be overly concerned about the temperature, but if you wanted a something for a full time boot drive I'd look elsewhere.
  • Reply 10 of 16
    macguimacgui Posts: 2,357member
    ivanh said:
    The recyclable plastic surface will unlikely survive for 5 years before getting sticky. Is it under warranty?
    Your observation and question would be better posed to the manufacturer's support team.
  • Reply 11 of 16
    tmaytmay Posts: 6,328member
    Really fucked up article from an editorial, or lack thereof, standpoint.

    The writer(s) keeps changing the product nomenclature such that the reader actually has to do research to figure out which device is actually being reviewed. Even the lede is suspect.

    Still, it got me interested in looking into the product line, so there's that.
    beowulfschmidt
  • Reply 12 of 16
    JinTechJinTech Posts: 1,022member
    dewme said:
    jwdawso said:
    Can I use it as a boot drive?
    I cannot think of a reason why not. I used the previous generation of this drive to boot my 2014 HDD only Mac mini for well over a year until I found a inexpensive way to install an internal M.2 NVMe SSD into the mini using the empty fusion SSD socket. 

    The only issue I encountered booting from the external usb3 drive was the difficult and tedious process of installing macOS upgrades. Normal startup and rebooting wasn’t an issue, but OS upgrades created a temporary boot volume as part of the multiple automatic rebooting sequence that did not respect the Startup Disk setting or even respond to the Option key being pressed. Long story short, every OS upgrade involved upgrading both bootable drives independently and having to reassert which drive to boot from. 

    Despite the issues that I encountered with the Mac mini case, using an external SSD as a boot drive turned an otherwise unusable machine with the world’s slowest hard disk into something that I could actually use. 

    The aesthetics on these SanDisk SSDs remind me of the Casio G-Shock watches, which I’ve always liked. I’ve always wondered why no one has done a smartphone with a similar rugged design aesthetic. Yeah, there are rugged cases to strap on to fragile glass and metal smartphones , but it’s not the same. 
    Rugged phones have been done for years.  They're still made, but not very popular.  They're edge-case devices with not a lot of sales. https://www.techradar.com/best/best-rugged-smartphones ; Most consumers tend to want sleek and pretty.  They also tend to want known brand names.  None of those linked phones are well known brands.
    Samsung has their XCover Pro line geared towards businesses.  https://www.samsung.com/us/business/products/mobile/phones/galaxy-xcover-pro/ ; Again, niche product.
    They used to make an "Active" version along with the regular version of their flagship S line.  They did it for the S4 through the S8.  Rumor has it they may revive the "Active" version.  S8 Active below.
    Samsung Galaxy S8 Active Price in Dominica July 2020  Specifications DM
    Rugged phones are not for your average consumer, they are primarily for people who work in construction or similar work, like electricians, etc where the phone may get banged around a bit or dropped from high distances. Generally for these types of users, it is not their primary phone either. 
  • Reply 13 of 16
    macguimacgui Posts: 2,357member
    tmay said:
    Even the lede is suspect.
    I agree with your post in its entirety, but this bit I especially liked. Most people never get that right, or get it at all. 
  • Reply 14 of 16
    JinTech said:
    dewme said:
    jwdawso said:
    Can I use it as a boot drive?
    I cannot think of a reason why not. I used the previous generation of this drive to boot my 2014 HDD only Mac mini for well over a year until I found a inexpensive way to install an internal M.2 NVMe SSD into the mini using the empty fusion SSD socket. 

    The only issue I encountered booting from the external usb3 drive was the difficult and tedious process of installing macOS upgrades. Normal startup and rebooting wasn’t an issue, but OS upgrades created a temporary boot volume as part of the multiple automatic rebooting sequence that did not respect the Startup Disk setting or even respond to the Option key being pressed. Long story short, every OS upgrade involved upgrading both bootable drives independently and having to reassert which drive to boot from. 

    Despite the issues that I encountered with the Mac mini case, using an external SSD as a boot drive turned an otherwise unusable machine with the world’s slowest hard disk into something that I could actually use. 

    The aesthetics on these SanDisk SSDs remind me of the Casio G-Shock watches, which I’ve always liked. I’ve always wondered why no one has done a smartphone with a similar rugged design aesthetic. Yeah, there are rugged cases to strap on to fragile glass and metal smartphones , but it’s not the same. 
    Rugged phones have been done for years.  They're still made, but not very popular.  They're edge-case devices with not a lot of sales. https://www.techradar.com/best/best-rugged-smartphones ; Most consumers tend to want sleek and pretty.  They also tend to want known brand names.  None of those linked phones are well known brands.
    Samsung has their XCover Pro line geared towards businesses.  https://www.samsung.com/us/business/products/mobile/phones/galaxy-xcover-pro/ ; Again, niche product.
    They used to make an "Active" version along with the regular version of their flagship S line.  They did it for the S4 through the S8.  Rumor has it they may revive the "Active" version.  S8 Active below.
    Samsung Galaxy S8 Active Price in Dominica July 2020  Specifications DM
    Rugged phones are not for your average consumer, they are primarily for people who work in construction or similar work, like electricians, etc where the phone may get banged around a bit or dropped from high distances. Generally for these types of users, it is not their primary phone either. 
    Confused.  Aren't you basically repeating what my post already says?  The Samsung link even showcases the industries you mention plus others as well.
  • Reply 15 of 16
    fastasleepfastasleep Posts: 6,417member
    I'm curious about the OWC Envoy Express now that it's shipping. TB3 and add-your-own drive, $79 for the enclosure and the cheapest 2TB NVMe drive I just found was $200. 
  • Reply 16 of 16
    macgui said:

    jwdawso said:
    Can I use it as a boot drive?
    Yes, properly formatted of course, you can but with a possible caveat. I did this with the 1T version and it gets very warm, as all NVMe drives do. But its case doesn't have the heatsink area of other cases and the top is covered in a rubber compound on  https://release1.net/despre-seriale  I'm just not sure if this would survive as your daily driver boot drive, but should certainly be fine for your troubleshooting kit. I may be overly concerned about the temperature, but if you wanted a something for a full time boot drive I'd look elsewhere.
    Yes, properly formatted of course, you can but with a possible caveat. I did this with the 1T version and it gets very warm, as all NVMe drives do. But its case doesn't have the heatsink area of other cases and the top is covered in a rubber compound.
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