“”The E28 has eight channels and 32 Chip Enables (CEs), with support for capacities up to 32TB. It also supports NAND speeds up to 4200 MT/s. Thanks to the process node shrink and architectural updates, power use ends up at 8.5W under heavy load — the E26 drives could hit up to 12.3W in our testing. It also has sequential read and write speeds of 14.5 GB/s, effectively maxing out the PCIe 5.0 x4 interface, with random read/write IOPS of 3,000K.
Retail SSDs using the Phison E28 controller should become available later this year.”
—Jarred Walton“-tomshardware.com
Source: tomshardware.com