Expert’s Rating
Pros
- Exceptional efficiency
- Long guarantee with a excessive TBW ranking
- Beefy Star Wars-themed heatsink
Cons
- Pricier than a plain FireCuda 530
Our Verdict
For followers of the Mandalorian (aka the spaceman with no identify), this themed model of the FireCuda 530 could have enchantment. It’s the identical super-fast performer, and also you don’t pay rather a lot for the seems to be.
Price When Reviewed
$168 for 500GB | $273 for 1TB
Best Prices Today: Seagate Beskar Ingot NVMe SSD (FireCuda 530)
$119.99
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$179.99
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It’s at all times good when there’s substance behind an attractive or good-looking facade. In the case of the Seagate Star War’s-styled Beskar Ingot NVMe drive, it’s particularly nice as a result of the substance of which I converse is the FireCuda 530—one of many quickest NVMe drives we’ve ever examined. We after all put this newest model by means of its paces and yup…substance.
This assessment is a part of our ongoing roundup of the best SSDs. Go there for info on competing merchandise and the way we examined them.
Design and specs
The Beskar Ingot NVMe is a 2280 (22mm extensive, 80mm lengthy) PCIe 4.0 x4, M.2 SSD. It’s out there in each 500GB and the 1TB model we examined. The 1TB mannequin options 1GB of SK Hynix DDR4 main cache, a Seagate-vetted Phison PS6108 controller, and 176-layer 3D Micron TLC (Triple-Level Cell/3-bit) NAND. All quick, long-lasting parts.
The most salient distinction between the Beskar Ingot and the plain FireCuda 530 is the themed heatsink. It’s styled to seem like a slab of the dear fantasy steel so wanted in The Mandalorian TV sequence. Evocative should you’re a fan.

Oddly sufficient, the costs Seagate quoted me for Beskar Ingot: $273 for the 1TB, and $168 for the 500GB, are barely decrease than for the common FireCuda 530 with a heatsink ($275 and $170, respectively). A FireCuda 530 with solely the inventory warmth spreader is $255 and $150. Unlike with the SATA version of the Beskar Ingot, you’re mainly paying further for the warmth sink, and getting a reduction for model. Go determine. Note that costs change, so examine by yourself earlier than buy.
The FireCuda 530 in any kind is a top-tier PCIe 4.0 drive with an uncompromising design (DRAM, quick NAND, and so on.), and as such, will value greater than second-tier and discount drives.
The Beskar Ingot NVMe carries the identical reassuring five-year guarantee and three-year data-recovery service of the SATA model we lately reviewed. However, it carries a much more substantial TBW (terabytes that could be written) ranking of 1,270TBW per 1TB of capability—greater than twice that of the SATA drive. In this case, the reassurance is actual!
Of course, whether or not you’ll be capable of benefit from the takes care of you put in the drive fully relies on your system. If you might have a window for observing your RGB and different inside workings, whole lot. If not, then it’s your thoughts’s eye!
Performance
To say we have been shocked on the Beskar Ingot NVMe’s efficiency can be an outright lie. We’ve already seen what the FireCuda 530 can achieve this this drive was no shock. It does, nevertheless, reveal the distinction that capability makes in sure areas of efficiency. The 1TB Beskar Ingot 530 could be very quick, nevertheless it nonetheless lags behind the 2TB SK Hynix P41 and 2TB FireCuda 530.
Why ought to capability matter? In this case, there’s half the DRAM and NAND, so caching isn’t as efficient with lengthy writes. There are additionally fewer NAND chips to unfold writes throughout. Normally, the impact of the latter is gentle till your drop to the 256GB fashions, nevertheless it’s noticeable within the CrystalDiskMark 8 take a look at proven under, and impacts all SSDs to some extent, it doesn’t matter what the model.

As you may see under, the Beskar Ingot NVMe was quick in our real-world transfers, if once more, not as quick because the 2TB competitors.

The 450GB write was a tad much less clean with the 1TB Beskar Ingot than the 2TB FireCuda 530. As if the controller was reassigning extra NAND for writing TLC as SLC on the fly. (Ya’ suppose?)

The Beskar Ingot model of the FireCuda 530 is a quick SSD. But not delivery in 2TB or 4TB flavors means you may’t get absolute best-in-show efficiency with the themed heatsink. We’re pretty assured, nevertheless, that it’s the equal of some other 1TB mannequin at present delivery if that’s the capability you’re searching for.
Internal drive exams at present make the most of Windows 11, 64-bit working on an MSI MEG X570/AMD Ryzen 3700X combo with 4 16GB Kingston 2666MHz DDR4 modules (64GB), a Zotac (Nvidia) GT 710 1GB x2 PCIe graphics card, and an Asmedia ASM3242 USB 3.2×2 card. Copy exams make the most of an ImDisk RAM disk utilizing 58GB of the 64GB reminiscence.
Each take a look at is carried out on a newly formatted and TRIM’d drive so the outcomes are optimum. Over time, as a drive fills up, efficiency will lower as a consequence of much less NAND for caching and different components.
The efficiency numbers proven apply solely to the drive within the capability examined. SSD efficiency can fluctuate by capability as a consequence of extra or fewer chips to shotgun reads/writes throughout in addition to the quantity of NAND out there for secondary caching.
Bottom line
The Beskar Ingot is a superb NVMe SSD, however so is the marginally cheaper, plain-Jane FireCuda 530. It’s my job to level out that you simply’re paying for a heatsink you won’t want except you’re continuously slamming giant quantities of knowledge onto the drive. If you do want the heatsink, then the Beskar model is definitely a hair cheaper. By all means.