Kingston DataTraveler Ultimate 3.0 thumbdrive (64GB)
Kingston DataTraveler Ultimate 3.0 review: A chunky USB 3.0 thumbdrive
The Kingston DataTraveler Ultimate 3.0 is a chunky USB 3.0 thumbdrive with a good turn of speed and capacity up to 64GB
Pros
- Significantly faster than USB 2.0 flash drives
Cons
- A little on the chunky side, doesn't realise the full potential of USB 3.0
Bottom Line
Compared to USB 2.0 flash drives, the Kingston DT Ultimate 3.0 64GB is a fast storage device -- well over twice the speed of the best that USB 2.0 has to offer, in fact. This speed is particularly welcome for the larger capacity thumb drives that are becoming popular, such as the 64GB unit we tested.
-
Price
$ 265.00 (AUD)
Both flash storage and USB 2.0 are everywhere in modern gadgets and computing. Put them together, though, and you won't see the full potential of flash. Until recently, USB was responsible for slowing down your storage transfers — USB 2.0 is the real bottleneck which severely restricts how quickly you can transfer data to and from thumbdrives and memory sticks.
Kingston's DataTraveler Ultimate 3.0 lifts the USB 2.0 restriction by offering a USB 3.0 plug on one end of its fat body. And with a theoretical (read: illusional) speed of 4.8Gbps, there ought to be enough bandwidth to accommodate any current storage media.
Techworld Australia secure storage reviews
- Group test: Encrypted external hard drive reviews
- Data Locker Enterprise review
- Data Locker DL3 encrypted hard drive review
- Eclypt Freedom 320GB review
- iStorage diskGenie review
- CMS ABSplus with Data Guard hard drive review
- CMS ABSplus FDE hard drive review
Depending which end of the cable you're looking at, the new-style USB 3.0 plug can look identical to the most common USB 2.0 plug (aka, Type A) — except its visible plastic bits inside are coloured blue.
And since the USB 3.0 standard is backwards-compatible with USB 2.0, this stick should work on any modern PC, albeit at slower speeds over USB 2.0.
Its power demands are higher than normal, we found. We tried the Kingston DT Ultimate 3.0 in the USB hub ports of our desktop keyboard, and found it wouldn't power up, where USB 2.0 flash sticks work just fine here.
A Y-cable is included in the pack, which should enable you to use the drive on even underpowered USB 2.0 ports, providing you have two positioned close together to play with.
The Kingston DT Ultimate 3.0 is available in 16, 32 and 64 GB capacities. It's in the latter capacities that a faster link should prove especially welcome, in order to fill the drive with files and folders without being left waiting.
As we hinted earlier, though, the DT Ultimate 3.0 is no sylph-like model, measuring 16mm thick, when many USB memory sticks are less than half that size. Given the small physical size of flash memory, we can only guess that the bulk of the device is filled with controller electronics for the USB 3.0 interface.
For too-closely spaced USB ports on a computer, you may need to use a USB extension cable to enable it to squeeze in without blocking other peripherals' plugs. And therein may lie a problem.
If you use a regular USB extension cable, such as the one included with the Kingston DT Ultimate 3.0 itself, you'll find the connection drops back to USB 2.0 speeds, even on USB 3.0 ports.
USB 3.0 extension cables are now becoming available, but can be relative expensive and hard to find at present.
Build and performance
The Kingston DT Ultimate 3.0 feels well made, constructed from white plastic with brushed aluminium side cheeks. A matching cap slips over the business end to keep out dust, and this is ‘handed' so only fits one way; with no markings outside to help orient it, you must look inside the cap first to see which way round the pieces fit together.
The cap also fits over the rear of the Kingston DT Ultimate 3.0 stick, so you can clip it there when in use — providing you haven't taken advantage of the lanyard hole on the main body to lash the drive to a keyring, for instance.
We tested performance of the Kingston DT Ultimate 3.0 64GB with both USB 3.0 and USB 2.0 connections.
In the ATTO Disk Benchmark running on Windows 7, the Kingston DT Ultimate 3.0 reached a maximum read speed of 83 MBps, with write speed a little slower at 69 MBps.
We'd normally crosscheck with HD Tune Pro too, but our copy of the benchmark software is not compatible with USB 3.0. Instead, we tried CrystalDiskMark 3.0.
In this test, the drive reached a maximum sequential read speed of 90 MBps and write speed of 72 MBps. Meanwhile 4 kB read and writes were handled at 5.8 and 7.3 MBps, respectively.
Over a USB 2.0 connection, the Kingston DT Ultimate 3.0 unsurprisingly performed much slower: in ATTO, data reads reached 35 MBps, while writes fell to 28 MBps.
These represent very good working speeds for USB 2.0, about the best we've seen for the older protocol in fact.
While these lab results show that this USB 3.0 drive far outstrips USB 2.0 devices, the intrinsic top speed is comparable only to that found on a traditional hard-disk drive. Much higher speeds ought to be possible from the union of flash memory and USB 3.0.
Whether the slowdown originates from the drive's controller or from the use of slower NAND flash is not clear; but flash media can potentially triple the top speed we saw in the USB 3.0 tests.
In a real-world test in Windows 7, we tried filling this 64GB stick up. When we tested a 64GB USB flash stick from Corsair, the Flash Voyager, we found noticeably poor write speeds that prevented quick top-ups. Based on its synthetic benchmark results, we calculated that to fill that particular stick would take in excess of three hours. And a subsequent real-life test suggested a time closer to six hours.
In the case of the Kingston DT Ultimate 64GB, we were able to fill the drive with 60GB of data (comprising 1.4MB data files) in 55 minutes. This real-life example suggests a transfer rate of just 18 MBps. That's a very poor result for Windows 7 whose cause we are still investigating.
The same real-world test in Mac OS X 10.6 — which does not support USB 3.0 and hence fell back to the USB 2.0 protocol — showed read speed of 33 MBps and write of 18 MBps.
Verdict
Compared to USB 2.0 flash drives, the Kingston DT Ultimate 3.0 64GB is a fast storage device — well over twice the speed of the best that USB 2.0 has to offer, in fact. This speed is particularly welcome for the larger capacity thumb drives that are becoming popular, such as the 64GB unit we tested. It could be even faster though, much faster in fact, given the combined potential of flash and USB 3.0; maybe we'll have to wait for the next generation of such devices to truly tap into those possibilities. Beware of the DT Ultimate 3.0's unit's physical size — if you're in a tight spot and are trying to squeeze the drive between other USB 3.0 ports, you'll need to find a new USB 3.0 extension cable if you don't want to downgrade performance to USB 2.0 speeds.
Best Deals on PCWorld
- Networking, Wireless & VoIPView all »
-
-
TP-Link TL-MR3020 Portable 3G/...
$33.00 -
Netgear WNDR3300 Rangemax Dual...
$167.19 -
Cisco WS-C2960S-48FPD-L
$3983.93 -
Cisco SGE2010P
$2154.90 -
Cisco 2951 ISR Voice Security ...
$6975.24 -
Cisco Standalone 48 10/100/100...
$4686.00 -
Tenda D830R ADSL2+ Modem Route...
$29.45 -
Netgear GS116 - ProSafe 16 Por...
$135.00 -
D-Link DGS-1100-08 8-port Easy...
$109.00 -
Netgear GS105
$42.90 -
Netgear WNDR4500 N900 Wireless...
$179.00 -
D-Link WebSmart Switch 48P 10/...
$448.62 -
TP-Link TL-WR941ND 300M Wirele...
$45.00 -
D-Link Motorola LS7808-SR20007...
$572.48 -
D-Link DSR-250N Wireless 11n R...
$239.00 -
AVM FRITZ!Box Fritzbox Fon WLA...
$279.00
-
- NotebooksView all »
-
-
Dell Inspiron 13z Laptop
$999.00 -
Dell Laptop Latitude E5430
$1229.00 -
Dell Inspiron 17R Special Edit...
$1398.99 -
Dell Laptop Latitude XT3
$3000.00 -
Dell Alienware M14x Laptop
$1799.00 -
Dell Alienware M17x Laptop
$2999.00 -
Dell Laptop Latitude E6430s
$1499.00 -
Dell Laptop Latitude E6430s
$2599.00 -
Dell Inspiron 15 (Touch) Lapto...
$1099.00 -
Dell Inspiron 15 Laptop
$999.00 -
Dell Inspiron 13z Laptop
$899.00 -
Dell Vostro 3560 Laptop
$799.00 -
Dell Alienware M18x Laptop
$3299.00 -
Dell Inspiron 15R Laptop
$699.00 -
Dell Alienware M14x Laptop
$2299.00 -
Dell Laptop Latitude E5530
$1979.00
-
- TabletsView all »
- Mobile PhonesView all »
-
-
Sony Xperia acro S
$427.85 -
Sony Xperia Z 3G C6602 LT36h 1...
$533.35 -
Samsung Galaxy S4 i9500 (16GB,...
$639.00 -
Apple iPhone 5 16GB White
$749.00 -
Samsung Galaxy Y S5360 Coral P...
$89.00 -
Apple iPhone 5 64GB SIM Free /...
$1034.00 -
Samsung Galaxy Ace Duos SIM Fr...
$233.00 -
HTC One SV LTE SIM Free / Unlo...
$325.00 -
Nokia 110 Dual Sim Mobile Phon...
$52.00 -
Sony Xperia U - NextG compatib...
$309.00 -
Samsung B7300 OmniaLite Digita...
$282.00 -
Apple iPhone 4 8GB White
$478.00 -
HTC Desire X T328 Black
$329.00 -
Samsung Galaxy Ace Plus Black ...
$164.97 -
Sony Xperia ion LT28H RED UNLO...
$357.97 -
HTC One X+ S728E 64GB SIM Free...
$499.00
-
- Printers & ScannersView all »
-
-
Dell Laptop Latitude 3330 BTX
$899.00 -
Brother HL-4570CDW COLOUR LASE...
$524.38 -
Dell Laptop Latitude 3330 BTX
$999.00 -
HP LASERJET P3015DN MONO LASER...
$860.50 -
OKI C110 A4 COLOUR LASER PRINT...
$237.90 -
HP LaserJet P3015DN Mono Laser...
$1681.68 -
Brother MFC-990CW Wireless Ink...
$218.00 -
HP LaserJet Pro M1536dnf Multi...
$455.21 -
Brother HL-4570CDW Colour Lase...
$532.30 -
Xerox Fuji Xerox DocuPrint M20...
$249.00 -
HP Laserjet Pro M1536 25PPM Ne...
$302.48 -
Brother MFC-990CW 33PPM Networ...
$244.34
-



Matty
1
Thanks for the useful review, could you try testing the Kingston in Mac OS X 10.8 (MLion) instead of Snow Leopard as the latter may not have the drivers to support USB 3 ?