Close Menu
TechurzTechurz
    What's Hot

    Startup Battlefield Australia application closes in days: Apply before July 6

    June 30, 2026

    Acti puts AI agents directly into your smartphone keyboard

    June 30, 2026

    The DeepMind trio who built a poker AI are now making money for quant hedge funds

    June 30, 2026
    X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube LinkedIn WhatsApp
    Tech Pulse
    • Startup Battlefield Australia application closes in days: Apply before July 6
    • Acti puts AI agents directly into your smartphone keyboard
    • The DeepMind trio who built a poker AI are now making money for quant hedge funds
    • Nvidia competitor Etched hits $5B valuation, $1B in sales for AI chip
    • Clicks shows off its BlackBerry-inspired phone in a new hands-on video
    X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube LinkedIn WhatsApp
    TechurzTechurz
    • Home
    • Tech Pulse
    • Future Tech
    • AI Systems
    • Cyber Reality
    • Disruption Lab
    • Signals
    TechurzTechurz
    Home - News - This 122TB SSD costs $12,400, but could shrink data centers and their power bills forever
    News

    This 122TB SSD costs $12,400, but could shrink data centers and their power bills forever

    TechurzBy TechurzJune 17, 2025Updated:May 11, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
    Nvidia Orin Nano and Solidigm D5-P5336
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


    • Solidigm’s 122.88TB SSD may not be the fastest, but it wins on density and design
    • At $12,400, this SSD isn’t cheap, but it could slash rack space and energy waste
    • Solidigm already has rivals with competing 122.88TB SSD products

    With a staggering capacity of 122.88TB, the Solidigm D5-P5336 currently holds the title for the world’s largest SSD.

    Launched in late 2024, it became available for purchase at $12,400, a figure which may seem steep, until one considers the operational cost savings from reducing physical rack space and energy usage.

    As Solidigm aims to lead the market in high-capacity enterprise storage, the company may soon face competition, not just in performance, but in scale.


    You may like

    A 246TB SSD may arrive in 2025

    Reports now suggest that a 246TB SSD could be introduced before the end of 2025, potentially doubling today’s storage ceiling.

    Solidigm’s drive has been positioned as a density-first product, with read speeds up to 7GB/s and write speeds of 3GB/s via PCIe Gen4.

    It is optimized for workloads that benefit from high sequential read performance, such as AI pipelines, CDN services, and object storage.

    Solidigm’s D5-P5336 122.88TB SSD packs a decent capacity into a single U.2 drive and sets a new benchmark in SSD storage density.

    Sign up to the TechRadar Pro newsletter to get all the top news, opinion, features and guidance your business needs to succeed!

    Yet despite the scale, real-world benchmarks indicate that performance doesn’t scale linearly.

    It often matches or slightly trails its 61.44TB predecessor in high-concurrency workloads, and lags behind Gen5 drives like Micron’s 61TB 6550, particularly in write-heavy operations.

    The 122.88TB model offers modest endurance at 0.6 DWPD, which equates to 134.3 PB written over its five-year warranty period.

    That makes it a fit for read-heavy environments, but less ideal for mixed or write-intensive deployments.

    Still, Solidigm’s strategy is clear: focus on maximizing storage per watt, per rack unit, and per dollar.

    As such, this drive may not be the best SSD in raw performance terms, but it plays a critical role in modern data centers where density and efficiency drive infrastructure design.

    The competitive landscape is also shifting, and little-known Chinese brand DapuStor has released its own 122.88TB SSD, joining the race toward high-capacity flash.

    While details on its long-term reliability and support remain limited, this signals growing interest in ultra-dense enterprise SSDs beyond established players.

    That said, the possibility of a 246TB SSD raises important questions. Can NAND technology and controller efficiency keep up with this growth?

    And will such capacity jumps continue to deliver meaningful performance improvements?

    As data centers brace for AI-driven demand, the answer may define not only the best external SSD for hyperscalers but the trajectory of the largest SSD and hard drive technologies overall.

    Via StorageReview

    You might also like

    122TB bills centers costs data power shrink SSD
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleLook away now, your older Samsung Galaxy Watch might soon be obsolete
    Next Article How to Boost Your Productivity With This AI Tool
    Techurz
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Opinion

    Omen AI’s plan to optimize data centers is all wet

    June 29, 2026
    Opinion

    a16z-backed Base Power is offering cheaper electricity to the power grid that needs it most

    June 25, 2026
    Opinion

    AI was supposed to kill engineering jobs, but new data suggests they’re the most resilient

    June 24, 2026
    Add A Comment
    Latest Tech Pulse

    College social app Fizz expands into grocery delivery

    September 3, 20252,290

    SolarSquare in talks to raise up to $60M as India’s rooftop solar market draws major VC interest

    May 23, 202622

    Future of Digital Privacy and Security: 7 Truths Nobody Tells You

    May 25, 202619
    Stay In Touch
    • YouTube
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • LinkedIn

    Techurz helps readers stay ahead of digital change with clear, practical, future focused technology intelligence written today,searched tomorrow.

    X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube LinkedIn WhatsApp
    Company
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Our Authors / Editorial Team
    • Write For Us
    • Advertise
    Policy
    • Editorial Policy
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Affiliate Disclosure
    • Cookie Policy
    • Disclaimer
    • DMCA
    Explore
    • AI Systems
    • Cyber Reality
    • Future Tech
    • Disruption Lab
    • Signals
    • Tech Pulse
    • Sitemap

    Join the Techurz Brief

    The future does not arrive suddenly.
    Stay ahead with fast, sharp tech signals.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.