Biwin NV7400 and X570 NVMe Drive Review

Introduction and Technical Specifications

Biwin NV7400 and X570 NVMe Drive Review

Introduction

We recently built a full AMD and ASUS rig to show what is possible using current components. There is no denying that the RDNA4 graphics cards are a big step forwards. The X3D Ryzen processors we already know to be superstars, and the sales figures back that up.

However, when you’re building a system you can’t always rely upon a single brand to fill in all the gaps. Which brings us neatly to Biwin. If you’ve not caught up with our coverage they are a company who have spent years building parts for other brands. The face behind the name as it were. Think of Flash Gordon where it’s really Peter Marinker speaking. Or the famous Milli Vanilla incident. Wanting to be credited for the hard work they put in, whilst also having better control over the end product, Biwin have hardware under their own label.

With the AMD build they provided both the DDR5 Memory kit we used, as well as the two drives. One for the operating system and one for storage. Naturally a responsive OS drive can make a huge difference to the snappiness of your system. Windows does tons of things in the background, so having a fast drive negates any minor lag. That’s the X570 Pro on the left. Gen5 means massive transfer rates. The storage drive is still no slouch. That’s the NV7400 you can see on the right. It’s not as if Gen4 NVMe drives are exactly slow.

Both drives are here in 2TB capacities. We know many of you have asked for a deeper look at their performance after our recent coverage, and that’s what we’re here to do. Let’s go.

Technical Specifications

NV7400

Biwin nv7400 spec

X570

x570 spec

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Tom Logan - TTL - tinytomlogan

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