OK. I'm curious.
First, how is cbn using his 800p? As a system boot disk? Or -- what motherboard features is he using? I think he's just using the 58GB 3DXPoint as a boot disk, and I get that notion from his CrystalDiskMark screenies.
Second, IntelUser2000 seems to be using the Intel 800p to cache a 2TB drive, but his CrystalDiskMark screenie suggests to me he's only accessing 1TB or 979GB of the Seagate HDD.
Is this ISRT caching? Or is it a newer feature on his motherboard?
I'll go ahead and post some screenies of my own, explaining why I'm not salivating over the 800P drives like Alpha One Seven. I've explained what software I'm using to cache drives on my sig Skylake system, which I was using for a few years before I'd even heard of 3DXPoint.
Here are the benchies (Magician, Anvil Benchmark, CrystalDiskMark) for my boot-system NVME 960 Pro [drive C:], which is cached to more than 8GB of RAM, enabling deferred writes to improve the write benchtests. The drive is installed in my PCIE x16 #3 slot which only offers x4 lanes, and therefore uses four of the twenty lanes provided by the chipset:
Here are the same three benchtests on a Crucial MX300 SATA SSD cached to a 250GB 960 EVO with 230GB caching volume, and then cached in a two-tier arrangement to another 8GB of RAM. The RAM allocations are separate for the two drive configurations, and the EVO is installed in PCIE x16 #2 -- robbing my graphics card of 8 lanes out of the 16 provided by the CPU:
Now, I could add two more screenies which show the real-time information from the caching-program's GUI, but I'll spare the readers and simply provide one of them. We're interested in the hit-rate on the cache after it's been running for several hours of computer use, and the hit-rate between the two drive configurations is similar, or in the range between 80 and 100%:
The hit-rate for the boot NVME is 94%, if you can't read the faint green print at bottom-right. The hit-rate for the SATA SSD configuration is 83%, and has been seen to climb to 100%.
The hit-rates would inform any ideas about how these benchtest scores would appear in real-world usage. And it's important to note that usage is a personal profile, or something that will vary over time as well as over different users.
With the RAM -caching, I have no need to worry about the better 4K performance I might see with the 3DXPoint 800P device.
Of course, I could say that I spent $130 for the EVO drive and another $180 for an additional RAM kit matching the original. The PrimoCache license and download is $30 for one computer. I had entertained getting 32GB RAM from the start when I built the system, but chose the 16GB kit initially. I was getting similar benchtests with the original 16GB kit, but I wanted bigger caches and just "wanted to see for myself."
You can make critical remarks about the expense -- the extra RAM, for instance -- but those were the choices I had, and my choices were driven just by curiosity.
I'd be interested in Alpha One Seven's usage and benchmarks for his two PCIE SSDs. But are they in RAID? Are they AHCI drives? Or are they NVME?