Final Words

The Plextor M8Pe cannot keep up with Samsung's 960 Pro, but otherwise it is a solid contender in the PCIe SSD space. Its overall performance is near the Samsung 960 EVO and the Toshiba OCZ RD400. All of them offer better real-world performance than Intel's SSD 750, showing that the PCIe SSD market has progressed and expanded greatly since that first consumer NVMe SSD. This level of performance now represents the middle range of the PCIe SSD market, where the Intel SSD 750 was a very exclusive top of the line product.

The M8Pe has once again shown that M.2 PCIe SSDs walk a fine line with with their power and temperature management. Comparing the M8Pe with and without its heatsink shows large performance differences on many of our long-running synthetic benchmarks, but minimal differences on our AnandTech Storage Bench tests that replicate real-world I/O patterns. Even though the M8Pe uses more power than most of its M.2 PCIe competitors, a heatsink is still not necessary for ordinary use. This is the same conclusion we came to with the Samsung 950 Pro and the Toshiba OCZ RD400. For users with unusually heavy storage workloads or with a concern for the aesthetics of their SSDs, Plextor offers two different cooling options: the M8PeY LED-lit add-in card with a substantial heatsink over the drive, or the similarly styled heatspreader on the M8PeG variant.

The performance differences between the Plextor M8Pe and the Toshiba OCZ RD400 are small enough that it will usually make sense to get whichever is cheaper at the moment. The RD400 does seem to have better write speeds while the M8Pe has better read speeds, but this adds up to only a slight advantage for the RD400 on our more realistic AnandTech Storage Bench tests. The RD400 also has lower power consumption than the M8Pe, which makes it less susceptible to thermal throttling during sustained loads.

The one big surprise from the Plextor M8Pe was its steady-state random write performance. With the heatsink it performed in the same league as the Intel SSD 750 and Samsung's 960 Pro and EVO. Even without the heatsink, it performed better than most consumer SSDs. Furthermore, when given the benefit of some extra spare area to work with, the M8Pe with a heatsink turned in the fastest steady-state random write speed we've measured on a consumer SSD. This shows that the Marvell 88SS1093 controller is quite capable of competing against Samsung's Polaris controller and even the enterprise-grade 18-channel monster from Intel. The Marvell controller can support 3D NAND, so we hope to soon see an even faster product using 3D MLC NAND. The steady-state performance of the M8Pe is also a credit to Plextor's custom firmware development, providing substantially higher performance and consistency than Toshiba delivered with the OCZ RD400 that uses the same NAND and a controller with comparable capabilities.

  128GB 250-256GB 400-512GB 1TB 2TB
Samsung 960 EVO (MSRP)   $129.88 (52¢/GB) $249.99 (50¢/GB) $479.99 (48¢/GB)  
Samsung 960 Pro (MSRP)     $329.99 (64¢/GB) $629.99 (62¢/GB) $1299.99 (63¢/GB)
Samsung 950 Pro   $196.90 (77¢/GB) $339.99 (66¢/GB)    
Toshiba OCZ RD400A $126.71 (99¢/GB) $215.76 (84¢/GB) $311.72 (61¢/GB) $729.99 (71¢/GB)  
Toshiba OCZ RD400 M.2 Out of stock $149.99 (59¢/GB) $279.47 (55¢/GB) $809.44 (79¢/GB)  
Intel SSD 600p $50.99 (40¢/GB) $80.99 (32¢/GB) $195.00 (38¢/GB) $386.80 (38¢/GB)  
Intel SSD 750     $349.99 (87¢/GB) $998.99 (83¢/GB)  
Plextor M8PeY
(AIC w./ heatsink)
$119.99 (94¢/GB) $179.99 (70¢/GB) $311.50 (61¢/GB) Out of stock  
Plextor M8PeG
(M.2 w./heatspreader)
$100.25 (78¢/GB) Out of stock $298.29 (58¢/GB) $649.99 (63¢/GB)  
Plextor M8PeGN
(bare M.2)
$84.95 (66¢/GB) $163.16 (64¢/GB) $249.99 (49¢/GB) $516.57 (51¢/GB)  

At the moment, Samsung's 960 Pro and EVO are still only available as pre-orders, and several other PCIe SSDs have limited availability. This makes price comparisons tricky, but the general trend seems to be that the Plextor M8PeGN is slightly cheaper than the Toshiba OCZ RD400. This also puts it right around the MSRP for the Samsung 960 EVO. When it becomes available and assuming prices don't shift dramatically, the 960 EVO will be the clear pick out of those three models at the 1TB capacity point: Samsung's SLC caching implementation is top notch and the 1TB 960 EVO has plenty of room to handle typical write loads. At smaller capacities, RD400 and M8Pe will have the performance advantage, especially for heavier workloads.

The big question for most users will be whether any of these PCIe SSDs are worth the price premium they carry over SATA SSDs. As compared to the Samsung 850 Pro, the M8Pe is at least 66% faster on each of our AnandTech Storage Bench tests. With the 850 Pro pricing around 42¢/GB, the PCIe SSD offers quite a bit more performance for the money. The comparison against more mainstream SATA SSDs like the 850 EVO is not as easy. At about 33¢/GB, the 850 EVO is just over half the price and the M8Pe can't always deliver twice the performance. It's even less often that the performance of the M8Pe would feel twice as fast, since it's hard to improve on something that already feels instantaneous. Ultimately, the SSD market has broadened to the point that there's nothing close to a one size fits all recommendation, but for now the Plextor M8Pe is one of several reasonable high-end options.

ATTO, AS-SSD & Idle Power Consumption
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  • Magichands8 - Wednesday, December 14, 2016 - link

    This is amazing! Tiny 128GB SSDs for $0.64/GB! And look at that 1TB for $0.51/GB! We even get to use a crappy Microsoft bundled driver for these! Who knows, in 2017 we may even get to see consumer SSDs reach $0.80, $0.90 or even $1+ per GB... Time doesn't stand still and neither does the endless march of progress. Brace yourselves guys, the future's going to be an amazing place.
  • ironwing - Thursday, December 15, 2016 - link

    What is a the reason that PCIe SSDs consume more power than SATA SSDs? Is it simply the higher speeds? The review covered the sleep state issues with the PCIe drives but when the drives are in a similar state, the SATA drives appear to be much more power efficient.
  • Billy Tallis - Thursday, December 15, 2016 - link

    I think the biggest problem is that the NVMe power saving states I'm testing don't include reducing the PCIe link speed or width. Keeping a PCIe 3.0 x4 link lit up takes a significant amount of power. The SATA drives by contrast are being told to put the SATA link in a low power state and take that as the signal to engage internal power saving mechanisms.
  • bbhaag - Thursday, December 15, 2016 - link

    Thanks for the great review Billy. I've been holding off on buying the Plextor for my new build hoping that Anandtech would put up a review and you guys delivered. Looks like they are solid drives at a mediocre price point. I knew I should have bought the 512 version when the egg had it for 179...sigh...oh well I can wait.
  • DigitalFreak - Thursday, December 15, 2016 - link

    $50 price difference for a heatsink? Really?
  • Bruce427 - Friday, December 16, 2016 - link

    I think that price includes a PCIe card as well.
  • Bruce427 - Friday, December 16, 2016 - link

    At first glance at published specks, it appears that the New Corsair MP500 NVMe drive may outperform the PlextorM8Pe for about the same price.
  • Bruce427 - Friday, December 16, 2016 - link

    Sorry, spell check got me. That should have been "specs."
  • Bruce427 - Friday, December 16, 2016 - link

    "specs"
  • Billy Tallis - Friday, December 16, 2016 - link

    The Corsair MP500 uses the Phison E7 controller. Next week I should have a review up of the Patriot Hellfire that is essentially the same drive. It's slower than the M8Pe on almost every test.

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