Test system and test preparation
In the first step, I use the usual suspects such as CrystalDiskMark, Atto, AJA and 3DMark Storage Benchmark. Finally, SPECwpc is used, which contains a lot of real applications. Let’s see if the Renegade G5 can pulverize the workstation performance of all the other SSDs I’ve tested. However, I picked out the applications with the biggest differences and loads as examples. I have also summarized the individual components of the test system in a table:
| Hardware: |
AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D (PBO 2, 5425 GHz OC) |
|---|---|
| Cooling: |
Arctic Liquid Freezer III 360 mm |
| Case: |
(open test-bench) |
| Monitor: | Samsung Odyssey OLED G8 34″ |
| OS: | Windows 11 Pro 24H2 (all updates, current certified drivers) |
Sequential performance of the unused SSD
As always, let’s start with the CrystalDiskMark.
The G5 easily achieves 14,700 MB/s when reading. It should achieve 14,000 MB/s when writing, which it does. It is interesting to note that the KC3000 is significantly faster with the Q32T1 (read 1020 MB and write over 800 MB). Interesting finding! What does the ATTO benchmark say?
Here too, the G5 delivers almost what is promised – at least when writing. Let’s see what the AJA test does.
The overview basically makes it clear: everything I’ve tested so far is put in the shade.
The Kingston Fury Renegade G5 can clearly set itself apart from its PCIe 4.0 market companions. Let’s see what else the SSD can do when it’s fully written to.









































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