- Virtual CIO
How to Create an IT Budget That Actually Works
11 Mar, 2026




£480.31 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
Kingston’s 960GB DC600ME is the sort of SATA SSD that tends to make sense when you want “proper enterprise reliability” without paying enterprise NVMe prices. For mixed workloads it’s generally a safe bet in typical 2.5" server roles—think boot drives, storage cache tiers, or general VM/datastore churn—especially if your platform is SATA-limited anyway. At £402.56 ex-VAT, the value is most attractive if you’re buying a few for upgrades and you care about predictable performance rather than chasing the fastest possible latency.
That said, I wouldn’t buy it as a default choice for anything that could take NVMe. If you’re planning a latency-sensitive environment, scaling performance, or you’re already standardising on faster storage, this SATA option can start to feel like a bottleneck pretty quickly. Also, make sure your use case truly matches “mixed-use”—if you’re doing heavy write-heavy workloads in a single pattern, you may be better served by a model explicitly tuned for sustained writes and higher endurance. Bottom line: it’s a sensible, no-drama enterprise SATA upgrade for the right hardware and the right workload; it’s less compelling if you’re modernising for speed or sustained write intensity.

Lenovo
Lenovo ThinkSystem 5210 Entry - SSD - encrypted - 3.84 TB - hot-swap - 2.5" - SATA 6Gb/s - 256-bit AES - for ThinkSystem SR530, SR550, SR570, SR590, SR645, SR650, SR665, SR850, SR860, SR950, ST550

Kingston
Kingston NV3 - SSD - 1 TB - internal - M.2 2230 - PCIe 4.0 x4 (NVMe)

Dell
Dell - Customer Kit - SSD - Mixed Use - 960 GB - hot-swap - 2.5" - SATA 6Gb/s - for PowerEdge R230, R330, R430, R630, R730, R730xd, R830, T430, T440, T630 (2.5"), T640 (2.5")

Lenovo
Lenovo ThinkSystem 5300 Entry - SSD - 960 GB - hot-swap - 3.5" - SATA 6Gb/s - for ThinkAgile VX2330 Appliance, VX3331, VX55XX Appliance, VX75XX Certified Node