The M9Pe is the new flagship SSD from Plextor, and its first NVMe SSD to use 3D NAND flash memory.  The M9Pe is the successor to both the M8Pe, which used Toshiba 15nm MLC, and the M8Se, which used Toshiba 15nm planar TLC. As with most SSD product lines, as a general industry wide implementation, MLC NAND is being abandoned in the transition to 64-layer 3D NAND. The M9Pe was officially launched at the beginning of this year, but the M9Pe didn't hit the shelves until March, and supplies are still inconsistent.

Plextor in the SSD Market

Plextor is the retail SSD brand of Lite-On, one of the larger suppliers of SSDs for OEMs. Lite-On doesn't manufacture their own NAND flash memory or SSD controllers, so their primary means of product differentiation is through writing their own SSD controller firmware. This often gives them an edge against companies that simply re-brand reference designs from the controller vendors, but as the biggest players in the SSD market are increasingly vertically integrated it is getting harder for Plextor to compete. The Plextor-branded retail NVMe SSDs also offer the cosmetic distinction of optional heatspreaders and add-in card adapters with heatsinks and LEDs. Aside from those cosmetic touches, the M9Pe is essentially the same as the Lite-On CA3 client SSD we reported on previously.

Using Toshiba NAND and Marvell Controllers

Like most Plextor SSDs, the M9Pe uses Toshiba NAND flash memory. This time it is Toshiba's 64-layer third-generation 3D TLC NAND. This is Toshiba's first mainstream, mass-produced 3D NAND, branded by Toshiba as BiCS 3. The controller in the M9Pe is the same Marvell 88SS1093 "Eldora" used in the preceding M8Pe and M8Se SSDs, so the M9Pe derives almost all of its improvements from the upgraded NAND. Plextor has managed to implement NVMe 1.3 features for the M9Pe despite using an older controller that was originally designed to target the NVMe 1.1 specification.

As with other NVMe SSDs from this generation, the large 256Gbit or 512Gbit capacity of each NAND flash die hurts performance of the smallest drive capacities. The 128GB option is gone from this generation because that would only use half of the controller's eight NAND channels. The 256GB M9Pe still has distinctly lower performance specifications than the larger models, especially for write speeds. Overall, performance specs are a bit below other current high-end NVMe SSDs like the Samsung 970 EVO and Western Digital WD Black.

The five year warranty period and ~0.3 drive writes per day endurance rating are typical for this product segment.

Plextor M9Pe Series Specifications Comparison
  256 GB 512 GB 1 TB
Form Factor M9PeY Half-height half-length PCIe add-in card (HHHL)
M9PeG M.2 2280 with heatspreader
M9PeGN M.2 2280 without heatspreader
Controller Marvell 88SS1093 "Eldora"
Interface NVMe 1.3 PCIe 3.0 x4
DRAM 512MB LPDDR3 1024MB LPDDR3
NAND Toshiba 64L BiCS3 3D TLC
Sequential Read 3000 MB/s 3200 MB/s 3200 MB/s
Sequential Write 1000 MB/s 2000 MB/s 2100 MB/s
4KB Random Read (QD32) 180k IOPS 340k IOPS 400k IOPS
4KB Random Write (QD32) 160k IOPS 280k IOPS 300k IOPS
Endurance 160 TBW
0.3 DWPD
320 TBW
0.3 DWPD
640 TBW
0.3 DWPD
Warranty 5 years
Current
Price
M.2 $119.99 (47¢/GB) $209.19 (41¢/GB) $408.26 (40¢/GB)
M.2 with heatspreader $123.62 (48¢/GB) $219.99 (43¢/GB) $441.87 (43¢/GB)
Add-in card $160.72 (63¢/GB) $245.02 (48¢/GB) Unavailable

The M9Pe is SSD is packaged in three different variants. The cheapest M9PeGN is the bare M.2 SSD. The M9PeG adds a heatspreader to the drive that should help a bit with thermal throttling during sustained workloads but may be physically too large to fit in some notebook systems. The M9PeY mounts the M.2 module on a PCIe x4 half-height half-length adapter card with a large heatsink and a row of RGB LEDs. The previous generation M8Pe and M8Se featured red and blue LEDs respectively, so RGB is the obvious way to make the M9PeY even gaudier. The RGB LEDs cannot be controller by the user and instead are managed by the same ITE 8259FN chip we've seen on several motherboards that also feature RGB LEDs. Aside from the lighting, the heatsink of the M9PeY is almost identical to the M8SeY, with a blue plastic insert swapped for red.

Since it first hit the shelves, prices on the M9Pe have come down to roughly match other top SSDs when comparing against the M9PeGN variant that lacks a heatsink. The versions with extra cooling carry a substantial premium. Newegg is the only major online retailer selling the M9Pe, and they're not currently listing the 1TB M9PeY add-in card model.

Our review samples are the 512GB M9PeGN (M.2) and the 1TB M9PeY (AIC), but we've also swapped the drives in the adapter card to present results for both capacities running as standalone M.2 drives and in the adapter with the heatsink and LEDs.

Competition for the M9Pe

Most of the competition for the M9Pe uses substantially different hardware. The second-generation Western Digital WD Black uses the same BiCS3 3D TLC NAND as the M9Pe but features Western Digital's new in-house controller. The M9Pe shows us what the new WD Black would have been like if WD's new controller hadn't been ready and if they had stuck with the Marvell controller for another generation. The WD Black and the Samsung 970 EVO showcase the strengths of a vertically integrated strategy with the NAND, SSD controller, firmware and drive all designed by the same company.

A little lower on the price scale are several competitors based around Silicon Motion's second generation SM2262 controller, a huge improvement over their earlier SM2260 controller. Intel uses the SM2262 in their own 760p SSD, and cheaper drives based on the SM2262 reference design are being sold by ADATA and HP. These drives offer performance close enough to the top SSDs that it's hard to pass up the savings.

For comparison against other market segments, this review also includes results from the ultra-premium Intel Optane SSD 900P and Samsung 960 PRO, the entry-level NVMe MyDigitalSSD SBX, and the mainstream SATA Crucial MX500.

This is our last SSD review using our 2017 SSD test suite. Future reviews will feature benchmark results from a testbed with Meltdown and Spectre patches and microcode updates current as of this month, and a few other tweaks to the test procedure. The Windows 10 version will still be 1709, because Microsoft has not yet fixed all the new bugs introduced in the NVMe driver in Windows 10 version 1803.

AnandTech 2017/2018 Consumer SSD Testbed
CPU Intel Xeon E3 1240 v5
Motherboard ASRock Fatal1ty E3V5 Performance Gaming/OC
Chipset Intel C232
Memory 4x 8GB G.SKILL Ripjaws DDR4-2400 CL15
Graphics AMD Radeon HD 5450, 1920x1200@60Hz
Software Windows 10 x64, version 1709
Linux kernel version 4.14, fio version 3.1
AnandTech Storage Bench - The Destroyer
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  • Drazick - Friday, May 25, 2018 - link

    I can see why you model Windows compatibility as a moving target.

    But in that case I think I read somewhere it was a known issue of the drives.

    Would you approach Microsoft and find out?
    It would be only fair before making assumptions.
  • DigitalFreak - Thursday, May 24, 2018 - link

    I wish HP would hurry up with the 2TB version of the HP EX920.
  • shabby - Thursday, May 24, 2018 - link

    The ADATA XPG SX8200 uses the same controller but with more provisioning, a bit less space though, but it gives it a bit of a boost compared to the ex920. Review is on tomshardware for both.
  • peevee - Wednesday, May 30, 2018 - link

    Why does not AT review EX920? Beats overpriced Samsungs they are pushing all the time?
  • asava - Thursday, June 21, 2018 - link

    Hello,
    Any chance you could provide the identify namespace information for this drive? Under linux that would be by "nvme id-ns /dev/nvme0n1".
    Thanks!

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