However there are no details yet as to when the world’s highest capacity 2.5-in SSD will be available, though some published reports have speculated it will be shipping next year. While Samsung released few details about the PM1633a drive, it did say the drive is based on the company’s latest 32GB (256Gbit), 3D Vertical NAND (V-NAND). That chip doubles the capacity of previous flash dies used by Samsung.
The SSD consists of 32 512GB flash packages, each consisting of 16 layers of 256Gb V-NAND memory chips. It also has a controller that supports the 12Gb/s SAS interface, and a whopping 16GB of DRAM to help manage all of it.
Unfortuately, we won’t be seeing this — or any similar SSD — in our next gaming machines anytime soon. It’s an enterprise grade device that will likely come at an enterprise grade price, though Samsung hasn’t released any details about how much this will set you back.
However good news is that later this year, the same drive will be available in smaller capacities as well: 7.68TB, 3.84TB, 1.92TB, 960GB and a meager 480GB. Samsung expects the new lineup to become the “overwhelming favorite over hard disks” in enterprise storage systems.