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Kingston Fury Renegade SFYRD/2000G 2 TB
without radiator

Photos - SSD Kingston Fury Renegade SFYRD/2000G 2 TB without radiator
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Placement: internal; Volume: 2 TB; Form factor: M.2; M.2 interface: PCIe 4.0 4x; Controller: Phison PS5018-E18; NVMe; Write speed (MB/s): 7000; Read speed (MB/s): 7300; DWPD (times/day): 0.6; Manufacturer's warranty: 5 years; M.2 cooling: graphene heatsink;
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Kingston Fury SFYRD/2000G
Placement
internal
Volume
2 TB
Form factor
M.2
M.2 interface
PCIe 4.0 4x
Controller
Phison PS5018-E18
Cache memory
2000 MB / DDR4 /
Memory type
3D TLC NAND
Number of 3D NAND layers
Micron 176L
NVMe
Write speed
7000 MB/s
Read speed
7300 MB/s
MTBF
1.8 m h
Write IOPS
1000 K
Read IOPS
1000 K
TBW
2000 TB
DWPD
0.6 times/day
Manufacturer's warranty
5 years
M.2 cooling
graphene heatsink
Size
22x80 mm
Weight
10 g
Official Website
kingston.com
Added to E-Catalog
October 2021
The information in the model description is for reference purposes.
Always clarify the specifications and configuration of the product with the online store manager before purchasing.
Catalog Kingston Fury 2026 - new arrivals, bestsellers, and the most relevant models Kingston Fury.
Model overview based on user reviews  
The Kingston Fury Renegade SSD is highly regarded for its exceptional speed and performance, making it one of the fastest PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSDs in its price segment. Users appreciate its high read/write speeds, with test results showing impressive figures, and its use of 3D TLC NAND flash memory, which offers a balance between speed and durability. However, it is noted that without a quality radiator, the SSD may overheat, and its energy efficiency is slightly below top competitors. Some users experienced issues with system slowdowns when multitasking, but these were resolved by using a separate SSD for the operating system. Overall, the Kingston Fury Renegade is praised for its reliability and longevity, with a recommendation to use a heatsink for optimal performance.
Pros

Cons

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One of the fastest PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSDs in its price segment
17 June 2025 
Results of the CrystalDiskMark test:
Read (MB/s):
SEQ1M Q8T1 = 7051.45
SEQ1M Q1T1 = 4506.30
RND4K Q3T1 = 1152.94
RND4K Q1T1 = 91.27

Write (MB/s):
SEQ1M Q8T1 = 6122.80
SEQ1M Q1T1 = 5752.71
RND4K Q3T1 = 853.90
RND4K Q1T1 = 335.33

I got it without a heatsink, using the native one on the motherboard. During intensive work, it heats up to around 30 degrees. It has a DRAM module, which allows for almost instant system and program loading. A quality Phison PS5018-E18 controller, on par with the Samsung Elpis controller in the 980 Pro. Similar to the Seagate FireCuda 530. 3D TLC NAND flash memory - a balance between speed and durability. More resistant to write cycles compared to QLC NAND in budget models. Good TBW and MTBF, indicating good reliability and longevity. Overall, I am satisfied with the choice of SSD.
Fast. Good write/read speed. Available DRAM module. 3D TLC NAND flash memory. High TBW endurance.
Without a quality radiator, it may overheat. Slightly inferior to top competitors in terms of recording. Slightly worse energy efficiency.
Alexuse Kingston Fury SFYRS/1000G few months
Poor cooling, get a heatsink for it, either from the motherboard or separately.
30 March 2025 
don't even consider it without purchasing a radiator.
-Read and write speeds are higher than those of the reviewers, provided that they tested an empty SSD, while mine is 82% full (931GB).
-temperature without radiator.
take it while it's worth the money
2 December 2023 
Despite the fact that I installed pci-express 3.0 in the port, I received read/write speeds of more than 5,500 MB/s
speed
nothing, oddly enough
Dmitry Bogartuse Kingston Fury SFYRD/2000G few months
3 out of 5 user review(s) shown
2 more user review(s)

Kingston Fury Renegade SFYRD/2000G configurations

Price for Kingston Fury Renegade SFYRD/2000G
Kingston Fury Renegade SFYRSK/1000G 1 TB
with radiator
from $340.373 offers
Kingston Fury Renegade SFYRDK/2000G 2 TB
with radiator
from $387.996 offers
Kingston Fury Renegade SFYRDK/4000G 4 TB
with radiator
from $995.003 offers
Video reviews

Modified version of the best-selling Kingston KC3000 for gamers

Let me remind you that the HyperX brand has come under the wing of HP, and now Kingston has decided to use the Fury brand for its advanced products, which is familiar to us from its memory series and “gaming” SSDs. In fact, the Fury Renegade SFYRS model is a slightly modified modification of the popular Kingston KC3000 SSD with an improved SLC cache mechanism, increased linear read speed to 7300 MB/s and a slightly more serious MTBF.

Proven Phison E18 controller

The main reason for the success of the original KC3000 was the use of the first mainstream platform with support for the PCI Express 4.0 bus, Phison PS5018-E18. The controller stands out due to its high linear read and write speeds (approx: 7300 and 7000 MB/s, respectively), as well as high IOPS, which can reach up to 1 million I/O operations per second. Without further modesty, this is one of the fastest PCIe 4.0 class SSDs that we have come across. Moreover, this speed is available to all solutions in the line, including junior drives with 500 GB of memory, so if 2 TB of memory seems like too much to you, you can always choose a less capacious drive of 1 TB or 500 GB.

Efficient low profile radiator

One of the signature features of the Fury Renegade is its unusual low-profile graphene and aluminium heat spreader with the signature Fury pattern. When actively used during games, it confidently maintains low temperatures and does not suffer from drawdowns associated with overheating. In stress tests when transferring a large number of files, the temperature may briefly rise to 85 ° C, however, again, this is just a stress test, in real-world use cases we did not notice any overheating.