Samsung

Samsung 9100 PRO 8TB .0x4 2280 Seq. Read Speeds

B0DY2TB1TD
ps58TBNVMe-PCIe4M.2 2280
$249.94/TB
$1,999.50
newIn Stock
Price updated
Jul 7, 2026, 08:42 PM
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Quick Verdict

The Samsung 9100 PRO 8TB .0x4 2280 Seq. Read Speeds delivers enterprise NVMe performance at $249.94/TB. Suited to read-intensive cloud workloads and mixed enterprise applications. Verify U.2/U.3 backplane compatibility before ordering.

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Specifications

Capacity8TB
Form FactorM.2 2280
InterfaceNVMe-PCIe4
Recording Tech
Sector Size
Workload Rating
Warranty5 years
ASINB0DY2TB1TD

90-Day Price History

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How it compares - 8TB NVMe-PCIe4
#1Acer 8TB Predator GM7 4TB : 2280 x4 2.0
$87.87/TB
#2WD WD_Black SN850X 8TB with Heatsink 2280 Up to
$141.86/TB
#3Lexar 8TB NM790 2280 Up to 7000/6200 MB/s Read/Write
$163.75/TB
#4Samsung 9100 PRO with Heatsink 8TB .0x4 2280 Seq.
$224.88/TB
#5Samsung 8TB 9100 PRO with Heatsink 4TB .0x4 2280
$225.00/TB

Frequently Asked Questions

This NVMe-PCIe4 cartridge requires a compatible NVMe-PCIe4 tape drive. NVMe-PCIe4 drives can also read the previous LTO generation.

BaFe (Barium Ferrite) tape media has an archival life of 30+ years when stored in controlled conditions (18-26°C, 20-50% humidity). Store tapes vertically and avoid magnetic fields.

Yes. LTO is an open standard. This cartridge works in any NVMe-PCIe4-compatible standalone drive or automated tape library regardless of manufacturer.

Use Case Scenarios

🗄️
OLTP Database Primary Storage
PostgreSQL, MySQL or Oracle requiring low latency and high IOPS.
✓ Excellent fit
NVMe delivers sub-200μs latency vs 5ms for HDD — a 25x improvement that directly reduces query response times. At 1 DWPD verify your daily write volume stays within endurance limits.
🤖
AI/ML Training & Inference
GPU server loading training datasets or serving inference at high throughput.
✓ Excellent fit
NVMe at 6,900MB/s eliminates storage bottlenecks when loading datasets to GPU memory. At 8TB you can store substantial model weights on a single drive.
💾
Bulk Cold Data Archive
Storing large volumes of infrequently accessed data.
✗ Not ideal
At ~$250/TB, NVMe costs 10x more than enterprise HDD for cold data. Unless you need fast retrieval, HDDs or LTO tape are far more cost-effective.

Maintenance & Troubleshooting

Maintenance Checklist

On installCheck SMART baseline on arrival
Run smartctl -a /dev/sdX and record: Reallocated_Sector_Ct, Power_On_Hours, Spin_Retry_Count. Establishes baseline for future comparison.
MonthlyRun SMART short self-test
smartctl -t short /dev/sdX — takes 1-2 minutes, catches most developing issues. Schedule during off-peak.
QuarterlyRun SMART long self-test
smartctl -t long /dev/sdX — full surface scan, takes 4 hours for 8TB. Any test failure is grounds for immediate replacement.
QuarterlyCheck RAID array health
Verify no degraded drives. A degraded array with no hot spare is one failure from data loss. Check mdstat or controller UI.
AnnuallyVerify drive firmware version
Check Samsung support site for firmware updates. Some versions have known bugs affecting integrity.
Every 3-5 yearsPlan proactive replacement
Enterprise HDDs have higher failure rates after year 4-5. At 8TB per drive, budget for replacements before failures occur.

Troubleshooting Guide

Cause: PCIe slot not initialized, missing NVMe driver, BIOS not updated, or U.2 cable issue.
Fix: Check BIOS for NVMe in PCIe enumeration. Update server firmware. Reseat U.2 cable. Verify PCIe bifurcation if using adapter. Test in another slot.