| RAM | 128 GB |
|---|---|
| Hard Drive | 128 GB |
Check fit by model:
SDSSDHP-128G-G25 SanDisk Ultra Plus 128GB SATA 6.0GB/s 2.5-Inch 7mm Height Solid State Drive
We don't know when or if this item will be back in stock.
| Digital Storage Capacity | 128 GB |
| Compatible Devices | Laptop |
| Hard Disk Interface | Serial ATA-600 |
| Brand | SanDisk |
| Series | Ultra Plus |
| Specific Uses For Product | Personal |
| Connectivity Technology | SATA |
| Hard Disk Form Factor | 2.5 Inches |
| Hard Disk Size | 128 GB |
| Form Factor | 2.5 inches |
About this item
- Make sure this fits by entering your model number.
- Increased performance for faster boot and application load times
- Increased reliability and durability over traditional hard drives
- Consistently high data transfer speeds
- Backed by a 3 year limited warranty
- Operating temperature: -32 Degree F to 158 Degree F (0 Degree C to 70 Degree C)
- Shock Resistant: up to 1500 G @ 0.5 m/sec
- Power Consumption (active): 0.12w
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Product information
Technical Details
| Brand | SanDisk |
|---|---|
| Series | Ultra Plus |
| Item model number | SDSSDHP-128G-G25 |
| Hardware Platform | Laptop |
| Item Weight | 1.92 ounces |
| Product Dimensions | 2.75 x 3.96 x 0.28 inches |
| Item Dimensions LxWxH | 2.75 x 3.96 x 0.28 inches |
| Flash Memory Size | 128 |
| Hard Drive Interface | Serial ATA-600 |
| Manufacturer | SanDisk |
| ASIN | B0093HMKVI |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Date First Available | December 21, 2012 |
Additional Information
| Customer Reviews |
4.6 out of 5 stars |
|---|---|
| Best Sellers Rank | #2,381 in Internal Solid State Drives |
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Product Description
SanDisk Ultra Pluss SSD. 128 GB 2.5: SSD Hard drive - SATA III interface. 530 MB/s read and 290 MB/s write. for the laptops
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonReviewed in the United States on December 18, 2015
Top reviews from the United States
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After 3 years 1 month and 5 days and could not have possibly run more that 27,120 hours if it was on 24 hours per day (it wasnt) it died....RIP.
It did give a bit of a warning for the last week or 2.....first froze win 7 and would hang reboot, stopping on the PCIe.sys, I assumed (wrongly) it was time to reinstall windows clean (on this SSD reformatted). Got windows to work after error checking and correcting on the SSD.
Was working with random BSOD, til today...locked up would not reboot, hangs on the SATA port its on (SATA1)...no longer recognized as a disk AKA BRICKED.
So KUDOS to the planned obsolescence people you employ!!! They did their jobs Perfectly!!! LINK NOT ALLOWED wiki/Planned_obsolescence.
I will replace this...just not with another Sandisk product, Other Sandisk products I have (usb sticks & mSD cards) are not quite that old..guess I will see if they suffer the same fate.
More precise testing with BlackMagic Disk Speed Tests, give an overall rating of around 220 for reads and writes, while the stock disk gives about 60. So, you're going to see a real world factor of 2-3 improvement in speed. Plus, the SSD is totally silent, more power efficient, doesn't have a sensitive read/write head, and is immune to fragmentation. These are all things to like.
Mechanical installation is simple, about 9 screws to open up the Mac, then a few more to extract the old disk and install the SSD.
Software migration was done like this. (1) Create a Mavericks USB installer on the thumb drive. (2) Use SuperDuper to make a bootable copy of the old disk drive onto an external disk drive. (3)Pull the old drive, install the SSD. (4) Boot from the Mavericks thumb drive and install Mavericks on the SSD. (5) When the install reaches the point where you can migrate data from a prior OS X installation, plug in the external drive and copy all the user settings onto the SSD. This results in a perfect copy of the previous install, but it's much faster, and all the files are defragmented along the way. The whole process takes a few hours, dominated by the time it takes to copy the original internal drive to the external disk drive.
So, well worth the price, although you have to understand the performance will still be about half of what you see on new Mac laptops, because they have faster i/o bandwidth to the SSD.
Update: Like it so much that I bought a second one while it was still on sale. Installed in a 2009 15" Macbook Pro, and it's like a new machine. Very simple install, again, an extremely worthwhile upgrade.
The solid state drives have been in existence for some time now, but I decided to wait a while until they became more affordable and more reliable, as is often the best way to go with new technology.
Since this drive is one of the more affordable sub-$100 SSDs, I finally went with the Sandisk, then went about the task of installing, then setting it up as my new primary boot drive.
The first clue I could see for how well this would perform was when I copied the entire 77 gigabyte contents of my old Seagate hard drive over to the new Sandisk.
Boy! that went fast.
After the copy and writing the boot sector to get the Sandisk to boot as primary, I expectantly did the reboot.
There was a huge improvement, where before it sometimes felt as if the hard drive had been churning, with boot times cut down dramatically.
I don't use the fancy hard drive performance testing programs to see how fast things are, so I'll instead give a simple boot time from my boot prompt, all the way to having Linux X-Windows launched fully:
Boot time into Linux X-Windows with the Seagate 1.5 TB hard drive = 50 seconds
Boot time into Linux X-Windows with the Sandisk SSD = 28 seconds
I'm not using a very new or particularly powerful system, a five-year old Intel Core2 Quad 9550 2.84 GHz CPU with 8 GB Of RAM, so this was an impressive improvement in storage access.
Also, as I point out in my video review, my system is also using the last generation of the SATA bus (SATA-2) vs. what all modern systems have, which is SATA-3, which has twice the bandwidth capability; so new systems will yield even greater performance gains from this drive, since it's designed to fully exploit that extra bandwidth.
I'm sure these solid state devices, when used with operating systems that have less efficient file systems that access the hard drive considerably more than Linux does (Windows, I'm looking right atcha), would yield an even more impressive performance improvement.
And, for those who haven't fully considered all the other advantages of SSDs, consider the other advantages they enjoy over conventional hard drives: run room temperature cool, use much less power, no moving parts, no vibration caused by them, far longer usable life than hard drives, and they're TINY...only slighter longer and wider than a credit card and as thick as a thumbdrive.
Unless something really weird happens, I fully expect to use this drive well into the next decade...really cool stuff.
Top reviews from other countries
I installed Windows 8.1 onto it. I'm very happy with how quickly it loads up, around 15 seconds from physically pressing the switch to arriving at the Windows login screen (and most of that time seems to be taken up by the computers POST routine), and the login to the desktop is fairly instant from there. This is much quicker than any HDD. Similarly with 256 Gb there's plenty of room to install your programs, and they load up very quickly too.
I did very little in the way of special tweaks to the operating system for SSD use. Windows 8.1 is well optimised for running off SSD's and should set itself up with the right settings. You just want to make sure that the SATA controller is in AHCI mode for best performance, and that TRIM is enabled. I just moved my documents, videos and music folders etc. over to my secondary hard disk.
was tricky cloaning my exsisting hd onto this, as there is no software with it, and on my old boot drive even though there was only 50gb when i went to cloan it it kept saying it couldnt fit on this 128gb drive, and that was becuase it was seeing my old drive as 500gb, took a while to figure this out but partitioned my old drive to 60gb and cloaned that then it fitted, but there is no info to tell you all this.
i know there are other ssd drives that come with software so if you are not experianced this one may not be the one for you.
other than that for the money it is good but if you are one of those who just let things install to default which is always "c" drive you will fill this in a heart beat, thats why i have a large sata 3 for my games and some other programs and just keep this for word processing and normal windows functions.
the price of the larger ssd drives are still far far too expensive even for a 240gb, so take all this into consideration.
you will however see a massive difference in boot and shut down and transfering files onto other drives, but again remember its fine that this drive can read and write 600 / 600 but if the drive you are moving things onto is a normal drive then that wont write so fast and you have a bottle neck.










