- Internet & Connectivity
The Guide to Business Ethernet: EoFTTP, EAD, and More
18 Mar, 2026







£1054.85 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
For £883.87 ex‑VAT, a 4TB NVMe like Kingston’s Fury Renegade G5 has to earn its keep fast. In practice, this is the kind of drive you buy when you’re building a high-performance workstation, editing stack, or a serious build/compile/scratch-disk setup where sustained throughput and consistent performance matter. Kingston’s Fury line is generally reliable and it’s a sensible pick if you want “good performance without fuss” from a mainstream brand—especially in environments where you’d rather not gamble on cheaper no-name drives.
That said, at this price point, I’d be cautious. For a lot of UK SMB use-cases—office apps, general file storage, light databases, typical VDI/tenant workloads—there are often better value NVMe options that deliver indistinguishable day-to-day results. Even for pros, the question is usually: are you performance-limited, or capacity-limited? If you’re not hitting that ceiling (or you don’t need the extra headroom), spending this much is hard to justify.
**Who should buy:** power users and teams running heavy sustained workloads that benefit from faster NVMe and you trust Kingston for ongoing deployments. **Who should skip:** standard business PCs, mixed-use machines, or any budget-conscious fleet where you can get most of the perceived performance elsewhere.

Kingston
Kingston DC600M - SSD - Mixed Use - 3.84 TB - internal - 2.5" - SATA 6Gb/s

Lenovo
Lenovo - SSD - encrypted - 1 TB - performance - internal - M.2 2280 - PCI Express 5.0 x4 (NVMe) - TCG Opal Encryption 2.0 - CRU - for ThinkPad P1 Gen 8, P14s Gen 6, X1 2-in-1 Gen 10, ThinkStation P3 Gen 2, P3 Tiny Gen 2

HP
HP - SSD - 2 TB - internal - M.2 - PCIe 4.0 x4 (NVMe)

Kingston
Kingston KC600 - SSD - encrypted - 256 GB - internal - 2.5" - SATA 6Gb/s - 256-bit AES - TCG Opal Encryption, Self-Encrypting Drive (SED)