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4.7 out of 5 stars

Samsung 840 EVO 250GB 2.5-Inch SATA III Internal SSD

$79.99
$199.99 60% off Reference Price
Condition: New
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Top positive review
3 people found this helpful
Samsung worth the headache?....... You decide
By ND on Reviewed in the United States on December 14, 2013
I have been a loyal Samsung customer for years. I have dozens of their products and when I entered the market to buy a SSD for my computer I was pleased to be referred to them as one of the top names for SSD's. My headache began as soon as I started the drive and initialized the 'Data Migration' Software to copy my existing Hard Drive so that I would not have to reinstall OS and all my programs. ( I do not mind doing this, but prefer not to if I can help it ). Right after the drive cloning was complete and I had successfully restarted with what seemed like no problems I was thrilled with the boot speed ( roughly 3x faster than my old hard drive ) from powered off to loaded desktop in solid 20 seconds. Fantastic. Then I proceeded to launch a game and test out some load speeds. I started receiving blue screen windows crashes ( too this day I had NEVER had ONE on this computer) and could not pinpoint the cause. Since this was the only new piece of hardware in my machine I started with the drive. I was unable to confirm exactly what when wrong but within 3 days this drive had become the bane of my existence. Every program I would attempt to run would crash. Nothing could load on it and I started getting constant errors for any and everything under the sun. (I even got an error when I attempted to shutdown?!) finally the drive just stopped all together. I then began to get an error on my motherboard. After contacting EVGA customer support I was guided to reset my CMOS. Cleared my issue and then had to diagnose what the heck was up with this drive.This drive was inoperable after my reboot. Whatever the final straw was set this drive into what Samsung calls a 'frozen state'. This drive also came with another product called Samsung Magician which helps optimize to drive and customize certain settings but also allows the user to do a 'Secure Erase' on the drive to wipe it to factory defaults. Apparently for whatever reason you are not suppose to reformat the drive within any other program as it can wipe certain factory settings off the drive leaving you with a pricey paper weight. Since this drive was inoperable at this point I had to reformat and reinstall windows on my old hard drive and get to a working version of windows so I could fix my drive through Samsung Magician. --Skip ahead 3 hours -- (HEADACHE) Samsung Magician cannot secure erase the drive while it is in a frozen state. (figures!)There is a process it guides you through in order to 'unfreeze' the drive. While in windows the process did not succeed for me. The second option to unfreeze guides you to load a DOS program on a USB stick and restart the computer and boot from the USB stick. I changed all my options in my BIOS and for whatever reason this would not work. It was suppose to run the DOS program after exiting BIOS and would never work. (headache continuing). On to the third option of clearing frozen state! instead of USB stick you need a disk (CD or DVD) that is blank and burn the program onto. Thankfully my last option worked! but..... the DOS screen looked more like a garbled frozen screen of hieroglyphics. I had found a forum online that discussed how to reset it. It suggested that while at the garbled screen hit 'ESC' to pull up a DOS command line and enter SEGUI0.exe . well all that does is restart the program which is still garbled. after a call to Samsung's customer support they told me the issue is that with newer video cards the screen cannot display correctly unless you type SEGUI0.exe /s . IT WORKED. happy day. finally we are getting somewhere. The program that is running is just a DOS version of the secure erase function from windows. it runs before you computer has booted. you need to have the option in your BIOS turned on for 'hot plugging' whatever connection the drive is plugged in for the next step. it tells you exactly what to do and will guide you to PULL THE POWER CORD ON THE DRIVE WHILE THE COMPUTER STAYS ON. Then replug in the power connection after a few seconds. then restart the application with the previous command you entered. The drive FINALLY unfroze. I had to secure erase because there was no freaking way I was going to clone the drive again. (I am fairly certain the excessive amount of errors were coming from improper cloning of the system files for windows) Doing the old fashioned way with an OS disc install directly onto the drive. ---PLEASE DO NOT MAKE THE MISTAKE I MADE HERE AS IT WILL COST YOU SEVERAL HOURS OF YOUR TIME TO FIX--- WHEN YOU GO TO INSTALL WINDOWS WITH THE OS DISK DISCONNECT ALL OTHER HARD DRIVES I did not do this and did get the drive working but after some testing realized that it was using the system reserved partition from my old hard drive to boot because windows did not make its own system reserved file on my new hard drive. And with several attempts I could not figure out how to clone the system partition over. Also when you are selecting the drive to install the new OS onto click on the drive and click the button at the bottom that says 'advanced options'. 3 or 4 more options should come up. CLICK NEW and it will tell you it has to secure part of the drive space for windows functions. It should create the partition right there in front of you that will read on the screen as 100mb in size. THIS IS THE SYSTEM RESERVED PARTITION YOU NEED TO BOOT THE DRIVE BY ITSELF. after you see that continue on installing the OS until you are all updated and have all your programs re downloaded. Then you can shut off your computer and reattach your other hard drives (if you have any). If you computer decides to start thinking for itself it may try to boot off of other drives, just goto BIOS and select the new drive the be the first in the BOOT priority. So after 2 re installs of windows and a lot of consideration for introducing my hammer to my SSD I did finally get a usable, NON ERROR forming drive that is fantastic. Perhaps some people did not have this much trouble but I certainly did. One note I would throw in. As of my current install I don't even run the Samsung Magician Software anymore. seemed to be more of a headache than anything else and my drive works fine without it after my old school OS install. All and all I am still happy with my purchase even with all the trouble shooting, in my opinion it shows the value and quality of this drive that It can recover from just about anything..... except maybe a smash from a hammer. I really doubt you should have any kind of compatibility issues but in case you specs are close to mine you may purchase without worries. My computer specs are: --Intel I5-2500K (Sandy) Processor --EVGA Z68 ATX DDR3 2133 Intel - LGA 1155 Motherboards 130-SB-E685-KR --EVGA GeForce GTX760 FTW with ACX Cooler 4GB GDDR5 256Bit Dual-Link DVI-I DVI-D HDMI DP SLI Ready 04G-P4-3768-KR --2x--Kingston Technology HyperX 8 GB (2x4 GB Modules) 1600 MHz DDR3 Dual Channel Kit (PC3 12800) 240-Pin SDRAM KHX1600C9D3K2/8GX --Windows 7 Home Premium SP1 64bit (Full) --Samsung Electronics 840 EVO-Series 250GB 2.5-Inch SATA III Single Unit Version Internal Solid State Drive MZ-7TE250BW --Western Digital 500GB and 1TB Blue HDD (7200rpm) SATA III --Pioneer Electronics USA 15x SATA Internal BD/DVD/CD Burner with 4 MB Buffer BDR-208DBK --Sony AD-7280S-0B 24x SATA Internal DVD+/-RW Drive (Black)
Top critical review
33 people found this helpful
If you have an AMD processor, read this...
By Rocky R on Reviewed in the United States on June 25, 2014
*** UPDATE *** I bought the 500GB Samsung SSD, but Amazon is showing 250GB I did a clean install of Windows 7 when I changed out my old hard (OS) drive a few weeks ago. For the first four days, I did some "real world" testing (I actually timed it) on how long it takes to copy several folders (various file types, about 70GB, with just a few videos) from the SSD to my two internal drives. I did the same with my portable drives. I was averaging 105MB/second when copying from the SSD to my internal drives (copying an all-video folder was even faster). Copying files from the hard drives to the SSD was also fast. I was impressed. I then installed the Magician software -- it confirmed that AHCI mode is activated. I also confirmed that TRIM is enabled. After a couple of days, I started noticing that my speeds were getting slower. I happened to come across an Amazon product reviewer (Britt) mention AMD processors (mine is a Phenom II X4 965). The reply from Samsung was to install Microsoft SATA port drivers, so I checked mine -- it had the "latest" Microsoft driver. I also verified that I had the latest AHCI SATA controller, the latest Samsung firmware, and the latest BIOS updates. I then uninstalled Magician (via Control Panel), and did more copying/testing. Speeds were still going down. I reinstalled Magician again. Tried different settings - max performance, max capacity, max reliability, and advanced. I also tried RAPID enabled/disabled, even over-provisioning. I swapped out SATA data/power cables, even changed SATA port connections. Same thing - speeds were getting slower. I uninstalled Magician one more time. This time I also looked for software remnants in the registry - couldn't find any. The only "trace" was in Control Panel (Power Options) - Samsung High Performance is still an option. More testing showed no improvement. I reinstalled it again - still no luck. I'm down to 30MB/second. Just to be sure that it wasn't a hardware issue, I copied files from one hard drive to another (and vice versa) - speeds were twice as fast! So I removed the Samsung, installed another brand of SSD, and also did a clean install on my new OS drive. I reloaded the same programs, settings, etc. Magician software was NOT reinstalled. After that, I reconnected the Samsung, and did a QUICK format. It became my secondary drive. Then I tested it again. Voila! It's back to its "glorious" speed. For comparison purposes, my WEI score (primary disk data transfer rate) started @ 7.4 (before Magician was installed) and went down to 6.6 after. After uninstalling Magician, it went back up to 6.8. On the other hand, my new SSD has a score of 7.7. Word to the wise: If you have an AMD processor, it might be a good idea to do some testing before you install Magician. If this SSD's performance starts to deteriorate again within the next few days/weeks, I'll update this review (and more than likely return or exchange it -- I may have gotten an underperformer).

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