SABRENT Rocket 2230 NVMe 4.0 1TB High Performance PCIe 4.0 M.2 2230 SSD [SB-2130-1TB]
$102.98
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Sabrent is a leading provider of innovative consumer electronics.
We are committed to designing and developing products that provide the utmost quality, dependability, and value.
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Specification: SABRENT Rocket 2230 NVMe 4.0 1TB High Performance PCIe 4.0 M.2 2230 SSD [SB-2130-1TB]
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10 reviews for SABRENT Rocket 2230 NVMe 4.0 1TB High Performance PCIe 4.0 M.2 2230 SSD [SB-2130-1TB]
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$102.98
Collin G. –
This 1TB SSD for the Steam Deck? It’s the real deal.Let’s talk speed—this thing flies. It’s like a turbo boost for your games, loading up in a snap and keeping everything running smooth as butter. A definite upgrade that doesn’t disappoint in the performance department.Installation? Piece of cake. Just a few screws at the back of the Deck, and you’re good to go. Plus, the case it comes with? Solid. It adds a nice touch and keeps everything snug and secure.Speaking of performance, not a single hiccup. No glitches, no issues—just seamless gaming. It’s the kind of upgrade that makes you wonder how you ever lived without it.In summary, this 1TB SSD for the Steam Deck is a game-changer. Lightning-fast speed, hassle-free installation, a slick case, and flawless performance. It’s the upgrade that takes your gaming experience to the next level without breaking a sweat.Feel free to adjust or add any specifics if needed! Is there anything else I can help you with?
Peter –
Love that now I have 2TB on my ROG Ally but you do only get 1.8TB of the storage but that is still plenty for most of your games and stuff.. easy to install and once you install it, well it does take a while since you have to re installing everything in the handheld and downloading games and apps are really really fast.. I got a steady speed between 600 to 700MB when downloading a game and it took about 30 minutes or less to download a game that has about 120GB.. the initial boost when downloading a game with this SSD was about max 900 and something MB for like 2 min and then it dropped to 600 to 700MB per second.. no problems with this SSD and just perfect for the ROG Ally.. highly recommend and worth the price for it
Ben B –
I had read a lot of horror stories about upgrading the M.2 NVMe drive on the Surface Pro 8 (SP8). There were a lot of stories about overheating and BSOD when trying to re-install Windows. When I saw this Sabrent drive advertised on Amazon it specifically said Surface Pro compatible and that it ran cool, so I took a chance on it. I am very pleased with the result.I’ll do the TL;DR part up front:I upgraded my 256GB M.2 Drive on my Surface Pro 8 with the 1 TB Sabrent Rocket 2230 NVMe M.2 drive, and the drive runs great at PCIe 4.0 Speeds according to CrystalMark 8. No BSOD and runs under 50 Celsius *EDIT*: Under maximum load, about 35 degrees celcius degrees idle/normal operations *END EDIT* according to CrystalDiskInfo 8. I was able to copy all of my files using Acronis partitioning software you get to use free from Sabrent when you purchase their drive.If you want to know exactly how I copied everything over without ever having to go into the BIOS, keep reading:UPFRONT DISCLAIMER: You will need to purchase three things to do this upgrade if you don’t have them already. Two of them you would need anyway if you were to upgrade like Microsoft suggests: #4 Torx screwdriver/bit, thermal compound, and an external NVMe drive enclosure.1) First I did purchase an external NVMe enclosure to copy the old drive to the new one. You can find them on Amazon for under $30 US. You need to make sure the enclosure can take 2230 size drives. I got one that had USB C to USB C cable and was thunderbolt compatible. Another consideration is that after you swap the NVMe drives you can use the enclosure with your old drive and have another high speed hard drive to back stuff up on, although I found you will need an NVMe thermal pad/heatsink for the old drive or it can overheat.2) After reading about BSOD NVMe upgrade horror stories on the SP8 it lead me to articles talking about AHCI Link Power Management – HIPM/DIPM. HIPM/DIPM power management is not on by default and you actually have to do a Windows registry edit to make it available. There are some good guides on how to do this via a quick google search. I recommend you enable it and turn the feature on.3) I had to disable drive encryption before copying files over (it is on by default). You can either disable encryption or get a USB encryption key. I chose to decrypt the drive which will take hours depending on how much data you have on the drive. You can re-encrypt once everything is over to the new drive.THIS NEXT PART IS WHERE MOVING FILES OVER AND GETTING WINDOWS SETEP ON THE NEW DRIVE DIFFERS FROM WHAT MICROSOFT WANTS YOU TO DO.4) I cannot stress enough the kudos to Sabrent for having their own disk partition software. Acronis, which you can get from Sabrent’s website, will copy all of your files over for you verbatim; no reinstalling necessary. Follow the disk cloning prompts, and the best part is it will automatically increase the size of your main windows drive to maximum while keeping your boot partition and recovery partition intact (just make sure you chose the correct cloning prompt). Acronis alone makes it worth it to go with Sabrent.5) The SP8 comes with a front and back metal sleave for the NVMe drive. YOU WILL NEED a #4 Torx screwdriver bit (very tiny!) to unscrew the drive and screw it back in. The metal casing snaps off (do so gently so as not to bend the casing). I cleaned off the thermal compound the old drive had, put in the Sabrent drive, re-applied some CPU thermal compound I already had, and put the casing back together, then screwed it back into the SP8. A lot of videos show using a thermal pad instead of re-using the Microsoft drive enclosure. I think the drive enclosure helps distribute heat evenly back into the SP8 chassis.I turned the SP8 on and it recognized me with all of my files intact without ever having to go into the BIOS the first time. I have been running normally for almost two weeks and not a single issue. Drive runs cool and fast. Works great and couldn’t be happier.I hope this helps you out if you are on the fence!
Emily –
I bought this to upgrade the storage in my Ally. It’s fast and works great. Easy to install. I bought a m.2 gen 4 ssd from these guys too for my desktop and that’s amazing as well highly recommended
Jade O. –
I wanted a fast, reliable drive to upgrade my 64GB Steam Deck, and this allowed me to do it without paying a premium for more storage. Easy install and works great for those graphically intensive games!
Liang Dong –
I bought the cheapest version of SteamDeck (64GB) and bought this 1T SSD. I followed a YouTube video to replace the 64GB storage to this 1TB SSD storage.Everything works well and I’m spending the 256GB SteamDeck’s price and get a 1TB SteamDeck value.This is a great buy if you want to DIY and expand your SteamDeck or other handheld game console.
Immier –
PCIe Gen 4 drives do have a compatibility issue with Surface Pro 8 and possibly 9 too were it randomly reboots and is very unstable. This drive does work without any issues if you make the following changes before cloning existing drive to it. I get double the speed from my stock drive at 4600MB/s read speeds and battery last around 6 hours (same as my stock) at 120Hz refresh, 50% brightness and using the keyboard at lowest backlight setting and just browsing the web over Wifi 6. Drive temperatures stayed at 41C or below at high load.This is what you need to do before cloning. Step #4 is necessary for stable upgrade without random reboots.1.) Update Windows 11 to 22H22.) Download the latest firmware updates for Surface Pro 8, there are some recent ones. Launch the surface app and verify that you have the latest. These are my versions.SAM: 11.101.139.0UEFI: 18.102.141.03.) Turn off bitlocker so the drive is decrypted, you can turn bitlocker again after you replace the drive.4.) In control panel, search for an applet called Power Options, it’s under the advance power settings when you try to edit the Power plan. Under PCI Express, change PCI Express -> Link Power State Management to Moderate Power Savings, default is maximum power savings, this was what was causing random reboots for me. This is the only change that is needed from the default factory image that ships with Surface Pro 8.5.) Clone to Sabrent drive using an external USB C enclosure that can house a 2230 ssd (there are several sold here). You can use their free Acronis tool from Sabrent’s website. I personally used Macrium Reflect free version to clone as it kept the partitions the same as before, Acronis does merge the partition’s which causes issues when trying to do a factory reset or recovery as partition will not be found.6.) Swap the drives. I did not re-use the metal surface pro ssd enclosure, I instead added .5mm thermal pad directly to the top of the Sabrent Drive, it fits nicely. With 1mm thermal pad, the magnetic door did not close, so .5mm is only choice. Max temperature at high load was 41c.7.) Boot to your new drive, test to make sure its stable, you can re-enable bitlocker to encrypt drive again.There is an optional setting you can set before or after the clone, which may give you better battery life. There is a hidden power setting in Power Options under Hard disk called AHCI Link Power Management – HIPM/DIPMBy default it’s already set to HIPM (Host Initiated Power Management), you can set this setting to Lowest for battery to give you deeper sleep states if supported, the drive still wakes up fast regardless of the power state.To enable this setting in Power Options you can add this to the registry. Create a text file in notepad that ends in .reg extension, example “Add_AHCI_Power_Setting.reg” without quotes. Copy and paste registry setting below (line starts with [HKEY….) into the file and save it, double click the file in file explorer to add this setting into your registry (when prompted, click yes). This option will now show up in Power Options under Hard disk. For battery, set to Lowest, for Plugged In, you can set to Active (There is no power management with this option), for faster performance.[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESYSTEMCurrentControlSetControlPowerPowerSettings 012ee47-9041-4b5d-9b77-535fba8b1442 b2d69d7-a2a1-449c-9680-f91c70521c60]”Attributes”=dword:00000002
TheCrazyCanuck –
I purchased a steamdeck and managed to pick up a 2TB grey market western digital drive (guessing for a surface off of Amazon) and had my 512GB steamdeck drive slapped into my surface pro 9 that only came with 256GB of storage. Half a year later I wanted a larger drive for my surface so that I can dual boot it and use it like a giant kindle so I looked around and found out about the new Sabrent model. I recall a rep talking about the 1TB model and stating they hope to be able to release a 2TB model if it fits their thermal specs and four months later things went well and we have this 2TB model. If I had to do it again I would have put one of these in my steamdeck as well but luckily my weird 2TB drive is going strong but after great luck with Sabrent I’m a happy camper with this 2TB drive in my Surface Pro 9. I use Sabrent PCIe to M.2 adapters and I also use their 4TB gen 3 drives in a six drive ZFS array that I play game off of over 25Gbps OM4 optics. So I trust Sabrent drives enough to offload all my high speed NAS usage needs to an all NVMe RAID built from their drives and I find their M.2 to PCIe adapters quite handy given I’m using a motherboard lacking PCIe lanes to M.2 sockets so their adapter boards have come in handy in expanding my RAID to 6 drives and I bet I can pull off a 7th with a x8/x8 bifurcation adapter for my raptor lake CPU.I always thought M.2 2230 was a dumb standard, now I get it. I hope the slightly longer standard of 42mm, starts to take off after the success of this product. For those of you who are only familiar with M.2 2280, the way to decode that number is M.2 22mm x 80mm. All M.2 drives in the consumer space are the same width (all are typically PCIe x4 so this can’t change much) and so only the length of the card differs. This is the shortest kind of M.2 since it’s only 30mm in length, which is why it’s a “M.2 2230” card. Before you purchase this card, make sure you really need a short M.2 2230 drive, perhaps a 2242, 2280 (very common) will fit and on the plus side the performance should be better since higher end controllers can be used, especially in the very common M.2 2280 form factor (22mm by 80mm “stick of gum” form factor). It’s great that this card is gen 4 for future proofing, but most of the devices that can accomdinate this card today are not going to put that bandwidth to great use so expect some slight slowdowns (or a lot on the steamdeck, not that you should be expecting much there in the first place).Very happy using this product to dual boot Windows 11 Pro and Linux Mint 21.1, I think split the drive in half Windows:Linux 50:50 and it’s working great. Again make sure the device you are attempting to purchase this drive for really needs a M.2 2230 drive to fit. I can use it on a Surface Pro 9 and Steamdeck which are small/thin requiring such a short (30mm) M.2 drive. If your system can accomindate a longer drive like 80mm (M.2 2280) then get that since cooling will be better and performance much higher. This drive is made for small stuff so use it in small stuff, otherwise go with something where the thermals/performance will be better, the only use case that makes sense of using this drive in a M.2 2280 socket would be to leverage the drive later in a compact device. But for compact spaces this drive thrives and I’m glad it was brought to the market.
Joe GoodVibes –
The SABRENT Rocket 2230 NVMe 4.0 1TB SSD was the perfect addition to my ASUS ROG Ally handheld build, providing much-needed additional storage space and performance. Assembling a compact and powerful gaming device required careful consideration of storage options, and the Rocket 2230 NVMe SSD fit the bill perfectly. Its compact form factor and high-speed PCIe 4.0 interface seamlessly integrated into the build, offering blazing-fast read and write speeds for smooth gaming experiences. With 1TB of storage capacity, I have ample space to store my favorite games, apps, and media files without worrying about running out of space. The reliability and performance of the SABRENT SSD have exceeded my expectations, contributing to the overall success of my handheld gaming setup. If you’re looking to upgrade your gaming device with additional storage and speed, I highly recommend the SABRENT Rocket 2230 NVMe 4.0 1TB SSD. It’s a game-changer!
joe farruggiojoe farruggio –
This 2230 SSD works great on the Lenovo Legion Go! If you are buying this for the Lenovo Legion Go, here’s what you need to know. It is single-sided and fits perfectly with an extended adapter plate to make it 2242 in size to fit the Legion Go. It runs cooler than double-sided NVME drives. When you install it, also install a 1mm thick thermal pad over the hard drive itself. You will thank me later. Once you do that, install the original foil that comes on the stock SSD onto your new SSD while covering the SSD and the thermal pad. This SSD will run nice and cool under load, 60 to 70 degrees. While not under gaming load it will hover in the 40 to 50 degree range. DO NOT install a copper heatsink over the SSD and thermal pad. The space is tight and it will generate more heat. PH00 scrw driver to remove the backplate and a PH1 to remove the SSD. Do not over-tighten. Use guitar pick to release backplate clips. Slow and steady wins the race. I used a Ugreen NVME elnclosure to clone the original SSD straight from the Legion go. If you want the copy to go faster, free up some space on the stock SSD.