Product Description: | GeneralInformationManufacturer: Intel CorporationManufacturer
PartNumber: SSDPEK1A118GA01Manufacturer
WebsiteAddress:
http: //www. intel.
comBrandName: IntelProduct
Line: OptaneProduct
Series: P1600XProduct
Name: Optane SSD P1600X Series (118GB, M. 2 80mm PCIe 3.0 x4,
3DXPoint)ProductType: Solid
StateDriveTechnicalInformationStorageCapacity: 118
GBDrivePerformanceMaximumReadTransferRate: 1760
MB/sMaximumWriteTransferRate: 1050 MB/sRandom 4KB
Read: 410000IOPS
Random 4KB
Write: 243000IOPS
Endurance(TBW): 1292
TBNetwork&CommunicationWirelessLAN: NoInterfaces/PortsDrive
Interface: PCI Express NVMeDrive
InterfaceStandard: PCI Express NVMe 3.0 x4Physical
CharacteristicsDriveType: InternalForm
Factor: M.
22280Width: 0.9"L
ength: 3.1"M iscellaneousDevice
Supported: Desktop PCWorkstationTabletThin ClientServer
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TBH, if you have to ask whether an Optane is right for your use case, it almost certainly isn't.
TBH, if you have to ask whether an Optane is right for your use case, it almost certainly isn't.
I snagged two for my Qnap NAS - it's got a dual M.2 / 10 gig ethernet card that I use for Qtier that massively improves write performance. We're talking sustained 2gbps+ writes on a 2.5gbps connection to my main rig (that's with a standard m.2 drive, not Optane - and they're both at 70% life after ~2 years). With Qtier off, I see 40mbps to 900mbps writes, and reads aren't that much better without Qtier.
I snagged two for my Qnap NAS - it's got a dual M.2 / 10 gig ethernet card that I use for Qtier that massively improves write performance. We're talking sustained 2gbps+ writes on a 2.5gbps connection to my main rig (that's with a standard m.2 drive, not Optane - and they're both at 70% life after ~2 years). With Qtier off, I see 40mbps to 900mbps writes, and reads aren't that much better without Qtier.
For most consumer use cases, it's hard to see a 118 GB drive doing the job. Most Optanes that are big enough for consumer purposes are also very expensive on a per-TB basis.
When in doubt, I tell people with 4th-gen capability on their boards to get the sk Hynix p41. 3rd-gen folks will usually be fine with the 970 or up from Samsung.
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Also I heard that these work well as L2 cache drives with PrimoCache but I haven't tried it.
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