Intel’s Optane SSD 905P is a follow-on to the Intel Optane SSD 900P we reviewed earlier this year. If you read that review, you already know about the ridiculously long claimed lifespan of Intel’s Optane memory. I'm talking petabytes written rather than terabytes regular NAND SSDs claim.

The 905P is also faster than the 900P and beats the pants off of any single M.2 PCIe/NVMe drive in threaded and small file performance. The downside? It’s really, really expensive.

Design and specs

Before I get to the specs, more on that price. The 960GB PCIe 3.0, x4 add-in card version of the 905P that I tested has a list price of a cool $1,300. The 1TB Samsung 970 Pro, a most worthy drive in its own right, costs less than $400.

There are other versions of the 905P, namely a lower-capacity 480GB (available on AmazonRemove non-product link) and a higher-capacity 1.5GB (list price $2,200), though I couldn’t find the latter online. All three capacities are also available (or will be) in a 2.5-inch form factor with a U.2 interface (formerly known as SFF-8639) with an adapter cable that runs to your m.2 slot. Also announced is a M.2/22110 (22 mm wide, 110 mm long) 380 GB version of the drive that won’t be available until November 2018.

The 905P uses Intel’s Optane non-volatile memory on board, which in turn uses the NVMe protocol for passing data back and forth with your computer. There’s not a lot we can tell you about Optane, other than it uses the company’s 3D XPoint technology. Intel is mum as to the technical details.

As the 2.5-inch and M.2 Optane drives we’ve tested so far are fast readers, but mediocre (for NVMe) writers, we assume that Intel is using some sort of RAID or other trickery to increase the 905P’s write performance. We tested only the 960GB version, and the performance of the smaller capacities might not be as fast.

There’s a large, finned, black heat sink covering the entire board, as well as blue LED lighting. The drive carries a 5-year warranty, however, that’s voided if used in a “multi-user, multi-CPU, data center environment.” Okay.

Intel This is the rather unusual 2.5-inch version of the 905P. It fits in a regular drive bay, but attaches to an M.2/PCIe port,

Intel has thoughtfully come up with a new way to describe longevity in saying that the 905P is good for 10 full drive writes a day. If that’s 10 writes per day of 960GB for the five years of the warranty, you’re talking about an endurance rating of around 17.5 PBW or PetaBytes Written, or 17,500 TBW (TeraBytes Written), which has been the normal metric the last few years. 17.5 PBW is probably more data than most users will write in their lifetime. Okay, users that are already adults, anyway...

Performance

Though it’s not quite as fast as the Samsung 970 Pro when it comes to sustained throughput, the 905P absolutely rocks when it comes to multi-threaded, multi-queued performance.

Below are the CrystalDiskMark numbers (the Intel 905P is in red, the Samsung 970 Pro, blue). Impressive. Random write is small file performance, sequential is large file or sustained write performance.

IDG CrystalDiskMark rated the Intel 905P as slower than the Samsung 970 Pro in terms of sustained throughput, but faster with smaller files. Small file performance is very important when it comes to the feel of your operating system and on servers fulfilling lots of file requests. Both drives are very fast.

AS SSD rated the 905P as slower than the Samsung 970 Pro in sustained throughput, and this test is far more sanguine about the actual speeds.

IDG Longer bars are better. The 905P is in red.

On the other hand, AS SSD showed the 905P can locate files far quicker (seek) and handle small files significantly better than the Samsung 970 Pro.

IDG We normally don’t show seek times as they’re usually pretty even, but the 905P was considerably faster over about 10 iterations of the test.

IDG In most 4K (four kilobyte data chunks) tests, the 905P dominated the Samsung 970 Pro. Longer bars are better.

Our copy tests also showed that the 905P was a bit slower than the 970 Pro with sustained throughput, but faster with our 48GB group of smaller files and folders. Both drives are very fast, but the 905P will come into its own in multi-access situations.

IDG The Intel 905P is slightly slower than the Samsung 970 Pro with the large files, but faster with groups of files and folders is the Intel 905P.

Money no object...

If money weren’t an issue, the Intel 905P is the drive I’d use in my system. The performance is great, and the promised longevity parlays into a sense of security other drives don’t quite provide. It’s quite simply the best thing out there.

But in the real world, where people actually work for money, I would have to say “Nay, nay...” It’s debatable whether even the 970 Pro is worth the money when there are very fast alternatives, such as WD’s NVMe Black available for $100 less.

This article was edited on November 30th, 2019 to correct the math for the TBW from 1750 to 17,500.