WD Blue SN5000 is Western Digital’s new budget AI SSD

It doesn't have AI, but WD claims it handles artificial intelligence-made files like a champ.

Western Digital has announced its brand new WD Blue SN5000 NVMe SSD, specifically designed for creative and artificial intelligence workloads. However, rather than just sticking AI in its name, there’s a method behind the madness, and the product has an aggressively low price point in the current climate.

Nowadays, file sizes are out of control. While 4K video has always taken up a lot of space, games are larger than ever, meme folders are bursting at the seams, and AI-generated content isn’t slowing down. In an attempt to handle our unwieldy digital hoarding and prepare us for the latest apps, WD Blue SN5000 comes in up to 4TB.

Like other Blue-labelled drives, this one isn’t trying to go toe-to-toe with the best SSDs. Its max 1,200TBW endurance matches a 2TB WD SN850X, is half the 4TB model, and pales compared to the eye-watering 219,000TBW in Gigabyte’s AI TOP 100E SSD. Up to 5,500MB/s sequential read and 5,000MB/s write speeds also don’t make the most of the PCIe 4.0 connector, but they’re zippy enough that you probably won’t notice.

500GB1TB2TB4TB
Seq. read speed5,000MB/s5,150MB/s5,150MB/s5,500MB/s
Seq. write speed4,000MB/s4,900MB/s4,850MB/s5,000MB/s
Random read460K IOPS730K IOPS650K IOPS690K IOPS
Random write770K IOPS770K IOPS770K IOPS900K IOPS
Endurance300TBW600TBW900TBW1,200TBW
Price$79.99$89.99$149.99$289.99

Its strength comes from optimisations. WD says it improves performance by up to 24% over the previous generation and handles Stages 4 and 6 of the AI Data Cycle better than others in the series. Without a hands-on, I can’t tell you how this translates in the real world, but the aim is to help you “maximise content creation workflows within AI environments.”

Without a doubt, my favourite aspect is the price point. WD Blue SN5000 doesn’t come as an immediate recommendation, as there are plenty of other drives with similar specs that benefit from discounts, undercutting the newcomer, but its £275.99 / $289.99 MSRP is far below the $400+ we’re used to seeing for 4TB models. Once we get to a point where these also benefit from sales, like this Samsung 990 Pro deal, they’ll unquestionably become one of the best budget NVMe drives on the market.

Damien Mason
Damien Mason
Senior hardware editor at Club386, he first began his journey with consoles before graduating to PCs. What began as a quest to edit video for his Film and Television Production degree soon spiralled into an obsession with upgrading and optimising his rig.

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