- Internet & Connectivity
How to Plan Network Infrastructure for a New Office
18 Mar, 2026







£181.31 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
The Kingston KC3000 512GB is a sensible “get-it-done” NVMe drive if you want fast everyday performance without paying top-tier prices. For typical business workloads—Windows/app usage, file transfers, light-to-moderate content work—the KC3000 will feel snappy and it’s a good fit for office PCs, thin clients with NVMe, and general upgrade jobs where reliability and value matter more than chasing absolute peak benchmark numbers. At £152.09 ex-VAT for 512GB, the pricing feels fair in the UK market, assuming you’re buying for practical performance rather than marketing speed claims.
That said, I wouldn’t rush to spec it for heavy write-intensive use or where drives will be hammered all day (e.g., lots of virtualisation churn, continuous logging on the same volume, or demanding media ingest pipelines). In those scenarios, you’ll usually be happier with a more premium line that’s better engineered for sustained workloads, even if it costs a bit more. Also make sure the target system supports NVMe properly and has adequate cooling—M.2 drives can throttle if you cram them into thin laptops without airflow. Overall: a strong choice for most office and SMB desktop upgrades, but not the one I’d pick if the SSD is going to be under constant stress.

Lenovo
Lenovo - SSD - 1.6 TB - hot-swap - 2.5" - SAS - for Storage D1224 4587

Lenovo
Lenovo ThinkSystem - SSD - 3.84 TB - hot-swap - 2.5" - SAS 12Gb/s - for ThinkSystem DE2000H Hybrid, DE240S, DE4000F, DE4000H Hybrid, DE6000F, DE6000H Hybrid

Kingston
Kingston FURY Renegade - SSD - 1 TB - internal - M.2 2280 - PCIe 4.0 x4 (NVMe) - integrated heatsink

HP
HP - SSD - 512 GB - internal - M.2 2280 - PCIe 4.0 x4 (NVMe) - for HP Z1 G8, Z1 G9, Elite 600 G9, 800 G9, EliteOne 800 G8, Pro 260 G9, 400 G9, ProDesk 405 G8