Skip to main content

Samsung 860 Pro review

Samsung’s new 860 Pro SSD is the minivan of computer storage

Samsung’s latest high capacity SSD leaked a bit ahead of schedule with its pricing and specs briefly popping up on the Samsung online store, but there’s more to the 860 Pro than its hardware and a hefty price tag. Specs can’t really communicate how… boring this SSD really is in everyday use — or why that’s a very good thing.

That’s right. This 1TB SSD is nothing exciting. It’s boring, move-along-nothing-to-see-here-boring, and that’s why it’s great.

Boring is the new- no, it’s the same as always

Let’s clarify that a little. You want your processor to be exciting, you want it to be able to crunch numbers at unparalleled speeds. A quick processor is marketed with all bunch of redundant buzzwords that try to communicate how blisteringly fast it is — “limitless” and “uncompromising” get thrown around all over the place. For good reason though, you’ll feel every one of those new clock cycles when you invest in a new processor.

Samsung 860 Pro review
Bill Roberson/Digital Trends
Bill Roberson/Digital Trends

Same deal for your GPU. Nvidia and AMD market their latest and greatest with words like “perfected” and “groundbreaking” to communicate how powerful they are. A new GPU is meant to be exciting. It means you can crank up those setting and game at 1440p or 4K. A powerful graphics card changes the way you experience games. It’s tangible.

Looking for high capacity SSD is like shopping for a family car — you want reliability and safety over speed.

What about your hard drive though? These are marketed with words like “reliable” and “stable.” A good hard drive is quick, sure, but it’s more important that it be reliable, especially if it’s in the 1TB range. That’s a lot of data to store in one place.

Looking for a hard drive with more than a terabyte of storage space is like shopping for a family car. Speed is good, but really you want safety and reliability. Your minivan might not be able to cruise down the highway at high speed, but really it’s more important that it gets everyone where they need to go safely. And that’s what the Samsung 860 Pro really is, it’s a minivan. Available in configurations up to 4TB, it’s a really big minivan, but the principle is the same.

Quick enough, but not jaw-dropping

During our tests the Samsung 860 Pro proved that it’s fast enough to keep you from feeling bogged down, but still a bit short of the kind of speed you’d see in a smaller, sportier PCIe or M.2 drive. It averaged a read speed of 562 megabytes-per-second, and a write speed of 531MB/s. For a SATA drive, that’s right around what we’d expect to see — just quick enough. Naturally, it’s a lot slower than the kind of speed you’d see out of an M.2 drive like the Samsung 960 Pro — which we usually see with a read speed of 2.5GB/s, and a write speed of 1.9GB/s.

Samsung 860 Pro review
Bill Roberson/Digital Trends
Bill Roberson/Digital Trends

The Samsung 860 Pro is, based on our results here, a strong, reliable performer. We can’t really test its long-term reliability, but based on Samsung’s track record here, and the fact that the Samsung 860 Pro comes standard with a five-year warranty, chances are this thing is going to outlast your processor and your GP — and it’s just a boring old hard drive. The Samsung 860 Pro, and its predecessor the Samsung 840 Pro both prove, when it comes to your sensitive data, that boring is a very, very good thing.

DT Editors' Rating: 4/5

Topics
Jayce Wagner
Former Digital Trends Contributor
A staff writer for the Computing section, Jayce covers a little bit of everything -- hardware, gaming, and occasionally VR.
All of Samsung’s videos from today’s Galaxy Unpacked event
Samsung's Galaxy S23 Ultra phone.

Samsung Galaxy Unpacked took place earlier today, and the tech giant was busy pulling the wraps off of gear like it was Christmas all over again.

The new kit includes three new flagship phones: the Galaxy S23, the S23 Plus, and the S23 Ultra, along with three new laptops for its Galaxy Book line.

Read more
The Galaxy Book 3 Ultra is Samsung’s most powerful laptop ever
Samsung Galaxy Book3 Ultra laptop.

Samsung has announced updates to its flagship Galaxy Book laptops for 2023, including a new addition called the Galaxy Book 3 Ultra. This one is Samsung's answer to the 16-inch MacBook Pro -- a maxed-out beast of a laptop with up to an Nvidia RTX 4070 and an Intel 13th-gen Core i9 processor.

Samsung has shied away from tackling a larger, more powerful laptop, making the Galaxy Book 3 Ultra particularly noteworthy. It's not small though. The 16-inch laptop is 0.65 inches thick and weighs 3.9 pounds. That's large for a Samsung laptop, but it's actually over a pound lighter than the 16-inch MacBook Pro -- to put things in perspective.

Read more
Samsung Galaxy Book 3 Ultra vs. MacBook Pro 16-inch
Someone typing on the Samsung Galaxy Book 3 Ultra.

Apple's MacBook Pro 16 has emerged as one of the best laptops you can buy in the 16-inch class. It's incredibly well-built, elegantly designed, superfast and efficient, and has the best keyboard and touchpad on a laptop today. It's a hard machine to compete with outside of its high price.

But that didn't stop Samsung from pushing out the Galaxy Book 3 Ultra, which is stocked with fast Intel and Nvidia components and aimed at providing a competitive but lighter 16-inch machine. The Galaxy Book3 Ultra looks good on paper, but can it compete with the MacBook Pro 16?
Specs

Read more