- Google Ads & PPC
How to Optimise PPC Landing Pages for Maximum Conversions
18 Mar, 2026
£1646.52 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
The Micron 7450 PRO is the sort of SSD I’d actually feel comfortable putting into a busy UK server or storage box where data integrity and sustained performance matter more than flashy benchmarks. “Read Intensive” is the giveaway: it’s built for workloads that are mostly about serving up reads reliably (think archival tiers, log/search backends, boot/virtualisation hosts with heavy read patterns, read-heavy databases). If your environment matches that profile, the value is in predictable behaviour and endurance over time rather than chasing peak numbers.
At £1372.10 ex-VAT for a 1.92TB drive, it’s not a “cheap upgrade”—so I wouldn’t buy it for a workstation, gaming rig, or anything write-heavy where you’re constantly hammering the drive. If you’re doing mixed or write-dominant workloads, you’ll usually get better cost-per-life with a different class of SSD. Also, if your team just wants “something fast to install quickly,” this is probably overkill; but if you’re buying for uptime, consistent latency under load, and want an enterprise-minded option, this is a sensible choice.

Dell
Dell - SSD - Mixed Use - 1.6 TB - hot-swap - 2.5" - SAS 24Gb/s

Kingston
Kingston XS1000 - SSD - 1 TB - external (portable) - USB 3.2 Gen 2 (USB-C connector) - red

Samsung
Samsung 990 PRO MZ-V9P2T0GW - SSD - encrypted - 2 TB - internal - M.2 2280 - PCIe 4.0 x4 (NVMe) - 256-bit AES - TCG Opal Encryption 2.0 - integrated heatsink

Dell
Dell - Custom Kit - SSD - Mixed Use - 1.6 TB - 2.5" (in 3.5" carrier) - SAS 24Gb/s - for PowerEdge R540, R550, R650, R660, R6615, R6625, R750, R7525, R760, R7615, R7625, T550