Transcend 110S, 128GB PCIe NVMe M.2-2280 Internal Solid State Drive - View 1

Transcend 110S, 128GB PCIe NVMe M.2-2280 Internal Solid State Drive

4.6 (1,943 ratings)
~$21.99 with 38 percent savings
View on Amazon

Key Features

  • Adopts PCIe Gen3 x4 interface and NVMe 1.3 standard
  • TS128GMTE110S
  • Sequential Read/Write -up to 1,500/400 MB/s
  • Engineered with a RAID engine and LDPC (Low-Density Parity check) coding to ensure data integrity; built-in SLC caching technology for exceptional transfer speeds
  • Engineered dynamic thermal throttling mechanism

Specifications

RAM
128 GB
Hard Drive
128 GB Solid State Hard Drive
Number of USB 20 Ports
1
Number of USB 30 Ports
1
Brand
Transcend
Series
1
Item model number
TS128GMTE110S
Hardware Platform
Linux
Operating System
Microsoft Windows 7 (additional driver required), Microsoft Windows 8 (additional driver required), Microsoft Windows 10, Linux Kernel 2.6.31 or later
Item Weight
0.32 ounces
Product Dimensions
3.15 x 0.14 x 0.87 inches
Item Dimensions LxWxH
3.15 x 0.14 x 0.87 inches
Color
Black
Number of Processors
1
Computer Memory Type
DIMM
Flash Memory Size
128
Hard Drive Interface
Serial ATA
Hard Drive Rotational Speed
1
Optical Drive Type
BD-R
Batteries
1 Lithium Ion batteries required.
Manufacturer
Transcend Information
Language
English, English, English, English
Country of Origin
Taiwan
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer
No
Date First Available
April 23, 2018

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Customer Reviews

James Walter
Revived my old acer laptop that I thought was never going to function again. Easy to install.
Quinn
I purchased this drive to use with a Raspberry Pi 4 (4 GB RAM) and paired it with an SSK USB 3 NVMe case+interface. Now, obviously the USB 3 interface slows things down compared to being able to install this directly into a computer with an NVMe interface, but the RPi doesn't have that option.I installed a fresh version of Raspberry Pi OS to the drive and was able to tweak the Pi to boot off of it instead of the default microSD card. And hey, it works really well! Writes and reads are much faster, and programs load much more quickly off the SSD than the microSD card. Furthermore, it's safe to say that read/writes wear will be much better on this SSD than a card, as well.
NasaGuyNasaGuy
I made this little SSD my primary boot drive for Windows, and now my computer boots in 5-8 seconds! A remarkable improvement from the minutes spent booting from my previous top tier hard drive disk. And that's with a heavy load of startup applications, without fast-boot enabled. Even when compared to other SSDs (non-NVMe) instead of obviously slow HDDs, the difference in speed is huge. Then there is the very helpful software available for this SSD that lets you track its health. Just icing on the cake!Now, although it does not have the best of the best speeds or storage capacity in the NVMe SSD category, it is still top tier (for the classes of SSDs) and a great value SSD.
TonyTony
Considering what I paid for it, it's a good upgrade from my other budget SATA SSD though at the speeds of solid state drives now, performance difference becomes harder to tell in day-to-day usage.Update: Almost one year to the day, it's still operating as my main OS drive. Write speeds for me aren't as great as I'd like but for purpose and price, this was cheaper than my last SATA SSD with improved read 3x read speeds and 100mb/s faster write speeds so well worth the price. This combined with a Ryzen CPU upgrade made my system so snappy for very little price.Update 2: Almost two years running as my main OS drive. I recently installed Windows 11, so far so good. This drive was meant as a stop-gap solution until I had more money to buy a more expensive NVME but it's still fast enough for me, no complaints. I use a faster Samsung NVME as my games drive anyway.Update 3, March 16 2022: New motherboard, the drive is still hanging in there with 15,600 hours and counting. In this setup I'm using x4 speeds but doesn't seem to make any difference for me, still roughly the same performance. See pic #2.Update 4, Jan 2024: Still going. Although it's now on my backup OS because I needed more space.