- Micron’s 6600 ION SSD improves random write performance with an unusually large onboard memory design
- Benchmark tests exceeded several official performance specifications during company evaluation
- Huge 64GB DRAM gives Micron a clear performance advantage over competitors
Micron’s new 6600 ION enterprise SSD packs 245.76 TB of QLC flash storage into a single E3.L formatted drive and has received widespread praise in early reviews.
TweakTown reviewer Jon Coulter gave the record a rare 99% rating, calling it “the one to beat in its category.”
The drive stands out mainly for its 64 GB of integrated DRAM, an unusual amount for this capacity class.
Why more onboard memory changes everything
Most ultra-high capacity SSDs near 256TB, like the DapuStor 245.76TB PCIe Gen5 SSD, use a 16:1 NAND to DRAM ratio, resulting in only 16GB onboard at this capacity level.
Micron instead uses a 4:1 ratio, giving the 6600 ION 64 GB of onboard DRAM for indexing random write operations. This larger memory pool allows the disk to support approximately 50,000 random write IOPS at a queue depth of 256, exceeding its specification of 42,000 IOPS.
For comparison, competing 245.76TB drives with 64,000 IUs would only manage around 15,000 IOPS for random writes under similar test conditions.
This performance is said to be more than three times faster than competing 245.76 TB drives built with a smaller 64 KB indirection unit.
Sequential performance also reaches up to 13,900 MB/s read and 3,159 MB/s write, both slightly above Micron’s factory specifications.
Random read performance reaches approximately 1.78 million IOPS, which exactly matches Micron’s published specifications for the drive under identical test conditions.
These results were measured using an Intel Xeon w7-2495X processor on a PCIe Gen5 platform running Ubuntu Linux, confirming the figures in real-world enterprise conditions.
Pricing and practical limits remain unclear
Despite the good benchmark results, Micron has not released an official price for the 6600 ION at the time of writing.
Reports suggesting a price tag in excess of $100,000 have circulated online, although no listings confirm this precise figure at the time of writing.
Enterprise SSDs at this capacity typically sell through direct contracts with vendors rather than through public retail listings, making prices difficult to verify.
The drive is backed by a 5-year limited warranty and supports major operating systems, including Linux, Windows Server, and VMware ESXi, in enterprise deployments.
It offers an endurance of 1 disk write per day, a modest figure that is still in line with typical enterprise storage workloads at this scale.
The drive also includes power failure protection and full data path protection, standard features expected in enterprise-grade storage designed for continuous operation.
Benchmark figures alone do not confirm the real value, since pricing and support costs remain unknown.
Whether the 6600 ION truly leads its class depends largely on how competitors price similar high-capacity QLC drives over the coming months.
Until official pricing is available, claims regarding its market position should be considered preliminary rather than fully confirmed.
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