Western Digital WD_BLACK SN770 2000GB

Specifications

Core

Capacity 2000 GB

Form Factor M.2 2280

Interface PCIe 4.0 x4

Performance

Seq Read 5150 MB/s

Seq Write 4850 MB/s

Endurance (TBW) 1200 TBW

Price History

Price history excludes Amazon sources

SSD Description

The Western Digital WD_BLACK SN770 2000GB represents a mature iteration of Western Digital’s vertically integrated, proprietary NVMe architecture. The drive utilizes an in-house SanDisk 20-82-10081-A1 controller paired with Kioxia/WD BiCS5 112-layer 3D TLC NAND. This architecture is DRAM-less, relying instead on a robust Host Memory Buffer (HMB) implementation to cache the logical-to-physical mapping tables in system RAM, a design choice that reduces physical footprint and power consumption while maintaining high burst performance. Hardware analysis indicates that the SN770 is power-efficient with excellent thermal management, rarely exhibiting significant thermal throttling in standard airflow environments, making it viable for laptops and ultra-thin builds; it supports Western Digital’s Game Mode (disabling low-power states to minimize latency), and the 2TB model maintains high sustained write speeds until the pseudo-SLC cache is saturated, after which write performance falls to native TLC speeds.

Key Specifications

  • Interface: PCIe 4.0 x4 (NVMe 1.4)
  • Sequential Read/Write: 5,150 MB/s / 4,850 MB/s
  • Controller: SanDisk 20-82-10081-A1 (4-channel, Proprietary)
  • NAND Flash: Kioxia/WD BiCS5 112-Layer 3D TLC
  • DRAM Cache: None (HMB Support)
  • Endurance: 1200 TBW
  • Physical Layout: Single-sided M.2 2280 PCB
  • Encryption: No hardware-based AES encryption (TCG Pyrite only)

Hardware Alternatives

  • Western Digital Blue SN580 2000GB: Serves as a direct architectural relative within the WD stack, utilizing similar controller technology and BiCS5 NAND but running at reduced clock speeds with restrictive firmware caps, effectively acting as a detuned version of the SN770.
  • Samsung 980 2000GB: A conceptual competitor as a DRAM-less, in-house NVMe solution, though the SN770 uses the faster PCIe 4.0 interface compared to the 980's PCIe 3.0 limitation.
  • Maxio MAP1602 drives (e.g., Lexar NM790 2000GB): Represent the primary third-party controller competition; while many MAP1602 drives utilize newer 232-layer NAND for higher peak throughput, they are compared to the SN770 due to similar DRAM-less, high-efficiency design philosophies.
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