team Plextor breaks overclocking world record

Team HW GURUS with Plextor M5 Pro Xtreme SSD after breaking new world record
Team HW GURUS with Plextor M5 Pro Xtreme SSD after breaking new world record

Leading SSD brand, Plextor sponsored an overclocking team at recently held ASUS’ overclocking event in Belgrade of Serbia with major overclocking teams participating in the competition including Extreme OC team, HW Gurus, break twelve world records.

 

The overclocking event saw Perica_barii, the Master of Overclocking, along with his team HW GURUS, break twelve overclocking world records on ASUS GTX 770 Cards with Plextor M5 Pro Xtreme SSD. The benchmarks that won the world records included 3DMARK Vantage, 3DMark 11, 3DMark 06, 3DMark Fire Strike Extreme, and Unigine heaven.

 

“Taking into account the fact that the world records were set on ASUS GTX 770 Cards with Plextor M5 Pro Xtreme SSD, the SSDs remained a powerful helping hand in success of passing and surpassing all the benchmarks thrown at the GTX 770 cards,” explained Bill Liu, Regional Manager-Channel Marketing & Sales Div., Plextor. “Plextor currently has two main goals – one is to give consumers high-performance and to focus on developing extremely reliable high-quality SSDs.”

 

At the event, HW GURUS overclocking team got a chance to try, for the first time, the ASUS’ Maximus VI Extreme, combining it with the latest ASUS GTX 770 DirectCU II with Plextor M5 Pro Xtreme SSD, and GTX 780 graphics cards. With modifications to the power hardware and liquid nitrogen cooling to -180°C, the team secured twelve overclocking world records over the weekend.

 

“Each Plextor storage product undergoes extensive testing during development in Plextor’s state-of-the-art testing facilities ensuring that it meets precise standards. Plextor SSDs can match users’ uncompromising standards for quality. During manufacturing every unit undergoes rigorous tests including extended burn-in/aging tests for complete reliability. Plextor consumer SSDs are the most reliable in the industry with an annual failure rate of only 0.16%, an extremely low level that we continue to reduce.” concluded Bill.

 

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