Launched in 2024, Sandisk/Western Digital’s WD Blue SN5000 is a consumer-oriented NVMe M.2 solid-state drive (SSD) positioned in the mainstream/value performance tier. The SN5000 relies on a 4-channel controller and does not include an on-board DRAM buffer.
A notable discrepancy exists between the capacities up to and including the 2TB model, which use triple-level cell (TLC) NAND, whereas the 4TB model is equipped with quad-level cell (QLC) NAND.
Performance is comparable to the WD Black SN770 from 2022, which is based on similar components.
Technical Specifications
| WD Blue SN5000 | 500GB | 1TB | 2TB | 4TB |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Form Factor | M.2 2280 | M.2 2280 | M.2 2280 | M.2 2280 |
| Interface / Protocol | PCIe 4.0 x4 / NVMe 2.0 | PCIe 4.0 x4 / NVMe 2.0 | PCIe 4.0 x4 / NVMe 2.0 | PCIe 4.0 x4 / NVMe 2.0 |
| Controller | Polaris 3 | Polaris 3 | Polaris 3 | Polaris 3 |
| DRAM | N/A (HBM) | N/A (HBM) | N/A (HBM) | N/A (HBM) |
| NAND Type | Kioxia 112-Layer BiCS5 TLC | Kioxia 112-Layer BiCS5 TLC | Kioxia 112-Layer BiCS5 TLC | Kioxia 162-Layer BiCS6 QLC |
| Sequential Read | 5,000 MB/s | 5,150 MB/s | 5,150 MB/s | 5,500 MB/s |
| Sequential Write | 4,000 MB/s | 4,900 MB/s | 4,850 MB/s | 5,000 MB/s |
| Endurance (TBW) | 300 | 600 | 900 | 1,200 |
| Warranty | 5-Year | 5-Year | 5-Year | 5-Year |
| Model Number | WDS500T4B0E | WDS100T4B0E | WDS200T4B0E | WDS400T4B0E |
Controller and NAND
WD’s proprietary Polaris 3 controller is a 4 channel, DRAMless design, which is typical in budget and mainstream SSDs like Samsung’s direct competitor, the 990 EVO.
Similarly, the NAND memory chips uses are not from the latest (as of 2024) and most expensive production processes. However, the 4TB capacity, which was released later than the smaller capacities, notably uses BiCS6 162-layer QLC NAND. Other things being equal, QLC NAND offers inferior performance and endurance compared to TLC. The 4TB WD Blue SN5000 is nevertheless slightly faster than the 2TB variant, but endurance is lower in relative terms.
Cache: DRAM-less
The SN5000 features a DRAM-less design like most other value-oriented SSDs. Instead, it relies on Host Memory Buffer (HMB) technology to utilize system RAM for caching. This is a substantially more affordable alternative to on-board DRAM and allows for a streamlined architecture typical of budget-oriented drives.
Power Consumption
An advantage of a less sophisticated design is a lower power draw compared to high-end models (especially compared to Phison E26 SSDs like the Crucial T700o). All SN5000 capacities are rated at a maximum average power consumption of 6.3W.
Performance Characteristics
The WD Blue SN5000 delivers competitive performance within its market segment, though it deliberately targets efficiency over maximum throughput. Real-world testing demonstrates that the drive performs consistently across typical consumer workloads, with sequential transfers reaching approximately their rated specifications under ideal conditions (e.g. ATTO). As is usually the case, the DRAM-less architecture introduces some latency in mixed workload scenarios compared to drives with dedicated DRAM.
Write performance varies based on workload patterns. Light burst writes benefit from the pseudo-SLC cache, but sustained write operations eventually exhaust the cache buffer, particularly on the QLC-based 4TB model, leading to performance drops during extended heavy workloads.
Reviews
The WD Blue SN5000 has been largely well received by technology reviewers, although the 4TB model in particular is criticized for its comparatively inflated price.
It’s the most powerful QLC SSD we’ve tested to date.
Overall, the SN5000 4TB is plenty fast for a laptop or PS5, or as a secondary drive for an enthusiast desktop build …
The simple fact is SSDs such as the WD Blue provide for those that need decent speed higher capacity SSDs at a price that won’t break the bank.
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