The 1TB model costs $59, the 2TB $93, and the 4TB $196.
Its also much cheaper than older PCIe 5.0 SSDs, such as the $169 FireCuda 540 1TB.
There were even a few instances where the O7000 tied or beat the Seagate and Corsair drives.
A particularly bright spot for the O7000 is its thermal performance and efficiency.
It only maxed out at 50 degrees Celsius, far lower than the three other SSDs we tested.
That makes the O7000 a decent candidate for laptops and handheld PCs, which often lack good SSD cooling.
However, the O7000s biggest weakness is in sustained writes.
Theyre essentially identical, so if theyre cheaper, just get one of those instead.
This is because SSDs run on Arrow Lake CPUs actually perform significantly worse than on 14thGen CPUs.
We also tested the Firecuda 530R, Firecuda 540, and MP600 Pro NH for comparison.