This update to the Rocket 4 Plus helps keep it competitive, but it’s not quite the fastest or most affordable. Absolutely worth snapping up if the price drops though, and those large capacities are tempting for ultra-high-end systems.
For
New NAND flash and firmware
Strong synthetic reads and writes
Solid real-world performance
Against
Uses the same model name
Not the fastest SSD
Not the cheapest option either
This update to the Rocket 4 Plus helps keep it competitive, but it’s not quite the fastest or most affordable. Absolutely worth snapping up if the price drops though, and those large capacities are tempting for ultra-high-end systems.
Pros
+
New NAND flash and firmware
+
Strong synthetic reads and writes
+
Solid real-world performance
+
Cons
–
Uses the same model name
–
Not the fastest SSD
–
Not the cheapest option either
The original Sabrent Rocket 4 Plus (opens in new tab) launched in the winter of 2020 and while it wasn’t quite the fastest drive around, it offered great performance at a decent price. Sabrent thinks it can do better than that though and has updated the firmware on the Phison PS5018-E18 controller and employed Micron B47R NAND TLC memory to improve the drive’s performance.
Somewhat confusingly, Sabrent hasn’t badged these new drives any differently from the original SSDs, so you potentially don’t know which you’re getting. Sabrent has said that all the original drives have now sold out, so everything on reseller’s shelves should be from this new generation, although there’s no way of telling from the packaging alone—the SB-RKT4P-1TB code is the same for both.
Once you’ve got the drive in your machine you can use the Sabrent Rocket Control Panel app to reveal the Firmware version. The newer drives have the R4PB47.2 firmware, whereas the original uses the RKT4P1.2 firmware. You can potentially check the NAND flash used as well, although to do that you’re going to have to peel off the metal sticker on the front of the drive, which acts as a heatspreader in normal operation.
The drive is available in 1TB, 2TB, 4TB, and 8TB capacities, with prices ranging from $149 for the 1TB drive right up to $1,499 for the top capacity. You can also get the heatsink at the time of purchase, although this may not be needed, depending on the cooling offered by your motherboard and your current case configuration. If you’re scouting it out for use in a Playstation 5, then it has a specific heatsink for that as well, which costs just an extra $10.
For reference, I benchmarked the drive without any additional cooling, not even that supplied by the motherboard manufacturer, and it maxed out at 70°C. That’s warm, but nothing to be worried about, and far lower than the rated operating temperature of 85°C. It’s also worth noting that you’re unlikely to hit such temperatures under normal conditions, as benchmarking pushes drives far more than normal day-to-day use.
Sabrent Rocket 4 Plus 1TB Specs
(Image credit: Future)
Model: SB-RKT4P-1TB Capacity: 1,000GB Interface: PCIe Gen4 x4 Controller: Phison PS5018-E18 NAND: Micron B47R 176-layer TLC Rated seq. read: 7,000MB/s Rated seq. write: 5,500MB/s Endurance: 700TBW Warranty: 5 years Price: $150 (opens in new tab) | £140 (opens in new tab)
Before jumping into the benchmarks, it’s worth highlighting the figures that Sabrent is quoting for this new drive: those are peak sequential read speeds of 7,000MB/s with writes on this 1TB model of 5,500MB/s. The 2TB and 4TB drives are said to have higher writes of 6,850MB/s and higher Random 4K IOPS of 650K as opposed to the 350K here.
Rounding out the specs, Sabrent quotes an endurance of 700TBW, which doubles up to 1400TBW for the 2TB model. You’re looking at a 5-year warranty too, although to get that you are going to need to register your drive when you buy it—not an unreasonable ask, although you do have to remember to actually do it amid the excitement of installing a new SSD.
Sabrent can be surprisingly conservative when it comes to its quoted sequential throughput, and sure enough, I saw higher figures on the writes in testing. You’re looking at 5,875MB/s in CrystalDiskMark and 5,604MB/s in ATTO.
Beyond the write performance, things are pretty much as you’d expect from a second-generation PCIe 4.0 SSD. You’re looking at strong performance, basically, particularly when it comes to the more synthetic benchmarks.
The issue for Sabrent here is that this performance is nothing to really get excited about. The likes of the WD Black SN850 pull out better numbers in PCMark 10 and in our real-world tests. The file copy, for instance, clocks in at 140 seconds, which is a couple of seconds slower than the WD drive.
This new version of the Sabrent can’t compete when it comes to the load times in Final Fantasy XIV either, which still has the WD drive holding first place at under seven seconds. It’s not lagging massively behind by any means, but given the WD drive costs the same as this drive right now, it’s pretty obvious where your money should go.
The new version of the Sabrent Rocket 4 Plus is a welcome release, even if it doesn’t dramatically alter the drive’s place in the market. We’ve had faster drives released recently, like the Kingston Fury Renegade (opens in new tab), along with more budget-focused offerings like the WD Black SN770 (opens in new tab), leaving the new Rocket 4 Plus in pretty much the same place as the original—not the fastest, nor the cheapest, but still worth shortlisting.
Sabrent Rocket 4 Plus (2022) 1TB review
This update to the Rocket 4 Plus helps keep it competitive, but it’s not quite the fastest or most affordable. Absolutely worth snapping up if the price drops though, and those large capacities are tempting for ultra-high-end systems.
Alan has been writing about PC tech since before 3D graphics cards existed, and still vividly recalls having to fight with MS-DOS just to get games to load. He fondly remembers the killer combo of a Matrox Millenium and 3dfx Voodoo, and seeing Lara Croft in 3D for the first time. He’s very glad hardware has advanced as much as it has though, and is particularly happy when putting the latest M.2 NVMe SSDs, AMD processors, and laptops through their paces. He has a long-lasting Magic: The Gathering obsession but limits this to MTG Arena these days.
Gundam sure are cool. Screenshot: CRAFTA クラフタチャンネル/YouTube The whole Earth has been shaken up by the global pandemic, m any things have changed, but worry not, Japan is still building giant Gundams. Thank goodness for that. That latest one-to-one scale recreation is the RX-93FF ν (Nu) Gundam, a revamped version of the Nu Gundam everyone …
Image: Neon Doctrine In my mind, The Legend of Tianding is a perfect gaming experience. Not because it can do everything, or that it allows the player to do anything. It’s perfect because it accomplishes all of its aesthetic and storytelling goals without overstaying its welcome. Despite offering only six story-driven chapters, its gritty depiction …
Home News Valheim (Image credit: Iron Gate Studios) Valheim has received a small content patch, as part of which it’s also shared a few sneak peeks at the next major expansion: Mistlands. The update adds some new enemy types to the Swamps region, which drop materials allowing hardy vikings to craft a new item: This …
Originally released back in 2016, Kathy Rain ($2.99) from Clifftop Games and Raw Fury is getting an enhanced release in the form of Kathy Rain: Director’s Cut later this month. Kathy Rain: Director’s Cut will release on iOS, Android, Nintendo Switch, and PC platforms. Kathy Rain: Director’s Cut follows a journalist investigating the death of …
Screenshot: Gung Ho (Kotaku) Today’s relatively short—even by livestreamed press conference standards—State of Play event was not the most eventful update we’ve ever seen, but here’s a roundup of everything showed up. Deathverse: Let It Die Upcoming arena battler Deathverse: Let It Die was announced today, and looks alright! The trailer showed off some melee …
Fancy slicing your way through a procedurally-generated, loot-filled world? Then Critical Slash could well be the game you’re looking for. And it’s out right now on the Play Store. The game is built by a one-person team and has an art-style that looks like it’s heavily influenced by the N64 era. You’re cutting your way …
Sabrent Rocket 4 Plus (2022) 1TB Review
This update to the Rocket 4 Plus helps keep it competitive, but it’s not quite the fastest or most affordable. Absolutely worth snapping up if the price drops though, and those large capacities are tempting for ultra-high-end systems.
For
Against
This update to the Rocket 4 Plus helps keep it competitive, but it’s not quite the fastest or most affordable. Absolutely worth snapping up if the price drops though, and those large capacities are tempting for ultra-high-end systems.
Pros
New NAND flash and firmware
Strong synthetic reads and writes
Solid real-world performance
Cons
Uses the same model name
Not the fastest SSD
Not the cheapest option either
The original Sabrent Rocket 4 Plus (opens in new tab) launched in the winter of 2020 and while it wasn’t quite the fastest drive around, it offered great performance at a decent price. Sabrent thinks it can do better than that though and has updated the firmware on the Phison PS5018-E18 controller and employed Micron B47R NAND TLC memory to improve the drive’s performance.
Somewhat confusingly, Sabrent hasn’t badged these new drives any differently from the original SSDs, so you potentially don’t know which you’re getting. Sabrent has said that all the original drives have now sold out, so everything on reseller’s shelves should be from this new generation, although there’s no way of telling from the packaging alone—the SB-RKT4P-1TB code is the same for both.
Once you’ve got the drive in your machine you can use the Sabrent Rocket Control Panel app to reveal the Firmware version. The newer drives have the R4PB47.2 firmware, whereas the original uses the RKT4P1.2 firmware. You can potentially check the NAND flash used as well, although to do that you’re going to have to peel off the metal sticker on the front of the drive, which acts as a heatspreader in normal operation.
The drive is available in 1TB, 2TB, 4TB, and 8TB capacities, with prices ranging from $149 for the 1TB drive right up to $1,499 for the top capacity. You can also get the heatsink at the time of purchase, although this may not be needed, depending on the cooling offered by your motherboard and your current case configuration. If you’re scouting it out for use in a Playstation 5, then it has a specific heatsink for that as well, which costs just an extra $10.
For reference, I benchmarked the drive without any additional cooling, not even that supplied by the motherboard manufacturer, and it maxed out at 70°C. That’s warm, but nothing to be worried about, and far lower than the rated operating temperature of 85°C. It’s also worth noting that you’re unlikely to hit such temperatures under normal conditions, as benchmarking pushes drives far more than normal day-to-day use.
Sabrent Rocket 4 Plus 1TB Specs
Model: SB-RKT4P-1TB
Capacity: 1,000GB
Interface: PCIe Gen4 x4
Controller: Phison PS5018-E18
NAND: Micron B47R 176-layer TLC
Rated seq. read: 7,000MB/s
Rated seq. write: 5,500MB/s
Endurance: 700TBW
Warranty: 5 years
Price: $150 (opens in new tab) | £140 (opens in new tab)
Before jumping into the benchmarks, it’s worth highlighting the figures that Sabrent is quoting for this new drive: those are peak sequential read speeds of 7,000MB/s with writes on this 1TB model of 5,500MB/s. The 2TB and 4TB drives are said to have higher writes of 6,850MB/s and higher Random 4K IOPS of 650K as opposed to the 350K here.
Rounding out the specs, Sabrent quotes an endurance of 700TBW, which doubles up to 1400TBW for the 2TB model. You’re looking at a 5-year warranty too, although to get that you are going to need to register your drive when you buy it—not an unreasonable ask, although you do have to remember to actually do it amid the excitement of installing a new SSD.
Image 1 of 8
Image 2 of 8
Image 3 of 8
Image 4 of 8
Image 5 of 8
Image 6 of 8
Image 7 of 8
Image 8 of 8
Test rig
CPU: AMD Ryzen 5 5600X
Cooler: Zadak Spark AIO
Motherboard: Gigabyte X570 Aorus Master
RAM: 16GB Thermaltake DDR4 @3,600MHz
GPU: Nvidia RTX 3080
PSU: Ikonik Vulcan 1200W
Sabrent can be surprisingly conservative when it comes to its quoted sequential throughput, and sure enough, I saw higher figures on the writes in testing. You’re looking at 5,875MB/s in CrystalDiskMark and 5,604MB/s in ATTO.
Beyond the write performance, things are pretty much as you’d expect from a second-generation PCIe 4.0 SSD. You’re looking at strong performance, basically, particularly when it comes to the more synthetic benchmarks.
The issue for Sabrent here is that this performance is nothing to really get excited about. The likes of the WD Black SN850 pull out better numbers in PCMark 10 and in our real-world tests. The file copy, for instance, clocks in at 140 seconds, which is a couple of seconds slower than the WD drive.
This new version of the Sabrent can’t compete when it comes to the load times in Final Fantasy XIV either, which still has the WD drive holding first place at under seven seconds. It’s not lagging massively behind by any means, but given the WD drive costs the same as this drive right now, it’s pretty obvious where your money should go.
The new version of the Sabrent Rocket 4 Plus is a welcome release, even if it doesn’t dramatically alter the drive’s place in the market. We’ve had faster drives released recently, like the Kingston Fury Renegade (opens in new tab), along with more budget-focused offerings like the WD Black SN770 (opens in new tab), leaving the new Rocket 4 Plus in pretty much the same place as the original—not the fastest, nor the cheapest, but still worth shortlisting.
Sabrent Rocket 4 Plus (2022) 1TB review
This update to the Rocket 4 Plus helps keep it competitive, but it’s not quite the fastest or most affordable. Absolutely worth snapping up if the price drops though, and those large capacities are tempting for ultra-high-end systems.
Alan has been writing about PC tech since before 3D graphics cards existed, and still vividly recalls having to fight with MS-DOS just to get games to load. He fondly remembers the killer combo of a Matrox Millenium and 3dfx Voodoo, and seeing Lara Croft in 3D for the first time. He’s very glad hardware has advanced as much as it has though, and is particularly happy when putting the latest M.2 NVMe SSDs, AMD processors, and laptops through their paces. He has a long-lasting Magic: The Gathering obsession but limits this to MTG Arena these days.
Related Posts
Thank Goodness, Japan Built Another Giant Gundam
Gundam sure are cool. Screenshot: CRAFTA クラフタチャンネル/YouTube The whole Earth has been shaken up by the global pandemic, m any things have changed, but worry not, Japan is still building giant Gundams. Thank goodness for that. That latest one-to-one scale recreation is the RX-93FF ν (Nu) Gundam, a revamped version of the Nu Gundam everyone …
The Legend Of Tianding: The Kotaku Review
Image: Neon Doctrine In my mind, The Legend of Tianding is a perfect gaming experience. Not because it can do everything, or that it allows the player to do anything. It’s perfect because it accomplishes all of its aesthetic and storytelling goals without overstaying its welcome. Despite offering only six story-driven chapters, its gritty depiction …
Valheim Developer Says ‘it’s Possible’ The Game Will Get Harder Difficulty Modes
Home News Valheim (Image credit: Iron Gate Studios) Valheim has received a small content patch, as part of which it’s also shared a few sneak peeks at the next major expansion: Mistlands. The update adds some new enemy types to the Swamps region, which drop materials allowing hardy vikings to craft a new item: This …
‘Kathy Rain: Director’s Cut’ Release Date, New Features, And More Announced For IOS, Android, Nintendo Switch, And PC
Originally released back in 2016, Kathy Rain ($2.99) from Clifftop Games and Raw Fury is getting an enhanced release in the form of Kathy Rain: Director’s Cut later this month. Kathy Rain: Director’s Cut will release on iOS, Android, Nintendo Switch, and PC platforms. Kathy Rain: Director’s Cut follows a journalist investigating the death of …
Everything Shown Today At Sony’s October State Of Play For PS4, PS5
Screenshot: Gung Ho (Kotaku) Today’s relatively short—even by livestreamed press conference standards—State of Play event was not the most eventful update we’ve ever seen, but here’s a roundup of everything showed up. Deathverse: Let It Die Upcoming arena battler Deathverse: Let It Die was announced today, and looks alright! The trailer showed off some melee …
Loot-Grabbing Action Game Critical Slash Out Now
Fancy slicing your way through a procedurally-generated, loot-filled world? Then Critical Slash could well be the game you’re looking for. And it’s out right now on the Play Store. The game is built by a one-person team and has an art-style that looks like it’s heavily influenced by the N64 era. You’re cutting your way …