Western Digital WD Green 1000GB
Specifications
Core
Capacity 1000 GB
Form Factor 2.5"
Interface SATA III
Performance
Seq Read 545 MB/s
Seq Write 525 MB/s
Endurance (TBW) 400 TBW
Price History
Price history excludes Amazon sources
SSD Description
The Western Digital WD Green 1000GB (SATA) is an entry-level, DRAM-less drive typically using a Silicon Motion SM2259XT controller paired with SanDisk BiCS 3D NAND. Without a dedicated DRAM cache, it relies on SLC caching algorithms to manage data mapping and burst performance, creating a separation in performance between sustained and burst workloads. The configuration prioritizes low power consumption and basic storage density over high-endurance random I/O, positioning the drive for light client workloads rather than write-intensive applications. Due to the lack of DRAM buffering, the drive is susceptible to higher latency during simultaneous read/write operations and heavy 4K random transfers, making it more suitable for cold storage or secondary game libraries than as a primary boot volume.
Key Specifications
- Interface: SATA III 6Gb/s
- Sequential Speeds: Up to 545 MB/s Read, 525 MB/s Write
- Controller: Silicon Motion SM2259XT (DRAM-less, subject to revision)
- NAND Type: SanDisk BiCS 3D TLC (Triple-Level Cell)
- Form Factor: 2.5" / 7mm cased
- PCB Design: Single-sided (typically short-board design inside full-size casing)
- Endurance: Low-tier TBW rating relative to capacity
Hardware Alternatives
- SanDisk SSD PLUS 1000GB: Shares a direct lineage with the WD Green, utilizing the same parent company’s NAND and often the exact same controller and board layout, resulting in nearly identical performance profiles.
- Western Digital Blue SA510 1000GB: Noted as having a significantly higher endurance rating (TBW) than the WD Green, suggesting higher-binned NAND or a controller configuration better optimized for wear-leveling.
- Crucial BX500 1000GB: Competes in the same DRAM-less tier; often uses the same Silicon Motion controller family (SM2258XT/59XT) but pairs it with Micron’s NAND, and can shift to QLC in newer high-capacity revisions.
- Kingston A400: A ubiquitous competitor that utilizes a Phison S11 controller (2-channel). The WD Green generally offers superior sequential write consistency compared to the S11 architecture, but both suffer similar limitations regarding random I/O latency.
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