
Micron Pushes Storage Boundaries with Blazing PCIe 6.0 SSDs—But Not for Consumers Yet
Micron has made history by launching the world’s first SSD using the PCI Express 6.0 standard, and it’s every bit as fast as you might hope. The new Micron 9650 series delivers sequential reads at an astonishing 28,000 MB/s and writes at 14,000 MB/s—dramatically outpacing PCIe 5.0 SSDs, including the fastest consumer models like the Teamgroup Z540. Unfortunately, this isn’t a product for gamers or creative professionals at home. It’s designed strictly for enterprise data centers, particularly those handling AI workloads that demand massive throughput and durability.
These high-performance SSDs are part of a new generation of flash storage built on Micron’s G9 NAND technology, featuring a six-plane architecture connected via PCIe 6.2. The drives come in two specialized versions: PRO for read-focused use cases and MAX for write-intensive scenarios. Depending on the configuration, customers can expect capacities ranging from 6.4TB up to an enormous 30.72TB. Random read and write performance is equally impressive, with IOPS ratings reaching 5.5 million and 900,000, respectively—figures that underscore just how far ahead of consumer-grade hardware these drives really are.
Endurance ratings are just as notable, with write limits starting at 14 petabytes for random usage and exceeding 58 petabytes for sequential workloads. This makes the 9650 family ideal for data centers performing continuous, high-volume processing tasks. But the sheer speed and density also come with significant thermal output, and Micron has accounted for this by offering not just traditional air-cooled options but also a liquid-cooled 9.5mm variant—a feature typically reserved for only the most thermally demanding deployments.
While PCIe 6.0 hardware has been expected to arrive sometime this year, Micron has beaten many to the punch with its data center-focused SSD. Still, consumers eager for the same technology will have to wait. Neither Intel nor AMD currently offers chipsets that support PCIe 6.0, meaning we’re likely a generation or more away from seeing this speed revolution reach mainstream desktop platforms. Until then, the Micron 9650 remains a tantalizing glimpse into the future of solid-state performance.

