Review: Thunderbolt 3 Akitio Node Lite & Intel Optane 905P SSD delivers sustained blisteri...

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in Current Mac Hardware edited January 2021
There isn't much in the way of storage that can touch the maximum speed that Thunderbolt 3 can deliver and keep pushing the data at that speed, but the Akitio Node Lite with Intel Optane SSD and Thunderbolt 3 comes very close -- without thermal slowdown.

Akitio Node Lite & Intel Optane 905P SSD
Akitio Node Lite & Intel Optane 905P SSD


Akitio partnered with Intel for this special edition of the Node Lite PCIe enclosure, which differs itself not just with the Intel drive but the firetruck red exterior and clear side panel. Packed inside is an Intel Optane SSD 905P that is blazing fast and has a 960GB capacity.

Of all the Thunderbolt 3 drives we've reviewed, the Intel Optane SSD is far and away the most capable, and doesn't get bogged down by frustrating slowdowns induced by thermal throttling.




Akitio Node Lite

The chassis holding everything together is the Akitio Node Lite. Akitio, who was just recently acquired by OWC, is known for excellent Thunderbolt 3 peripherals and has a non-red version of the Node Lite available that is a bit less showy.

Akitio Node Lite
Akitio Node Lite


It is a PCIe enclosure that will hold any PCIe card -- assuming it draws 75W of power or less. What sets this special edition apart is that bright exterior and the clear acrylic panel along the left side that allows a look at the innards of the enclosure, including the colorful LEDs along the SSD.

Akitio Node Lite & Intel Optane 905P SSD
Akitio Node Lite & Intel Optane 905P SSD


Both the Intel Optane SSD 905P and the Akitio Node Lite come separately, which leaves the installation up to the user. It only takes a matter of minutes by loosening the thumb screws on the back of the enclosure and sliding it out towards the front.

The card slots right in and is held in place by yet another thumbscrew. Then, the whole process is reversed to close it up.

The front of the enclosure has a ventilating grille with a fan hiding behind it. While using the drive, we found the default fan a bit loud -- especially when recording podcasts or voiceovers -- so this is something you may way to optionally swap out down the line.

Akitio Node Lite Ports
Akitio Node Lite ports


Along the back, you have a trio of ports at your disposal. There are dual Thunderbolt 3 ports which makes this a great enclosure for daisy-chaining with lower-demand peripherals. If you have another Thunderbolt 3 drive or a Thunderbolt 3 monitor, you can connect those to the Akitio Node Lite, then the Akitio Node Lite to your Mac.

Additionally, the DisplayPort connector on the back of the Akitio Node Lite lets you connect another monitor there as well.

Performance

We used the Akitio Node Lite and the Intel Optane 905P SSD for a variety of tasks, but most often video editing. While working in Final Cut Pro X, we saw huge speed gains in our workflow, especially when returning from a sleep state. It made transfers significantly quicker than a standard hard drive RAID configuration.

Akitio Node Lite & Intel Optane 905P SSD speed test
Akitio Node Lite & Intel Optane 905P SSD speed test


When we transferred a 4.6GB file from our Mac to the SSD, it was so fast the file transfer window barely had a chance to appear before the file was transferred. This is hard to demonstrate in text -- but the video covers it nicely.

To get a more concrete reading of the SSD performance, we turned to the Blackmagic Disk Speed Test. We ran the test multiple times after piles of file transfers, trying to keep the heat on the drive up. No matter what we threw at it, the files transfers at the end were as fast as the ones at the beginning.

Intel Optane 905P SSD
Intel Optane 905P SSD performance


In the Blackmagic test, we saw consistently fast scores on both read and write. Write speeds averaged around 1740MB/s and read speeds averaged just shy of 2100MB/s. Those are insanely fast speeds, above what nearly any other drive can put out -- especially at long intervals.

Using the SSD

Intel Optane 905P SSD thermal paste
Intel Optane 905P SSD thermal paste


As we mentioned before, the fan here is a bit on the loud side. This is less than ideal but helps ensure there is no thermal throttling of the SSD. Luckily, Intel has done a great job with the heat sink on the SSD. You can see the thermal paste in between the drive and the heatsink that helps facilitate this. Because of the stellar passive cooling, the fan isn't as necessary as it would be with other PCIe cards.

That said, if you find the fan too loud, just unplug it. We did, and we noticed no impactful drop in performance. If you do want to be doubly sure there is no dip in speeds, swap it out for a quieter off-the-shelf model.

Using both Thunderbolt 3 ports, we daisy chained additional Thunderbolt 3 drives and an LG UltraWide monitor and only saw slight dips in actual drive performance as bandwidth was allocated to the other peripherals.

Akitio Node Lite & Intel Optane 905P SSD
Akitio Node Lite & Intel Optane 905P SSD


One complaint we had was there was no way to control the lights on the side of the SSD. We love the bright, vivid blue, but at night or in low light it is a little eyeball-searing. Especially if you are trying to deal with color correction and a bright blue light is being cast on your display. Many times we had to use a piece of cardboard to cover the transparent panel.

If you are on Windows, there is an Intel utility that can tweak the colors and turn them off, but Mac users are left out in the cold. If you don't want this to be a burden, opt for the silver or black model of the Akitio Node Lite.

Most users out there aren't going to need the high levels of performance of the Akitio Node Lite with the Intel Optane 905P SSD. There are other SSDs that offer solid performance that don't cost as much and will work just fine.

However, if you want to go all-out, there isn't much better you can do.

Rating: 4 out 5

Where to buy

If you want to max out your workflow, you can grab the red Akitio Node Lite Thunderbolt 3 PCIe enclosure for $299.99 on Amazon. The basic silver version is slightly cheaper at only $217.99. Lastly the wonderful Intel Optane 905P SSD $1,261.22.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 12
    sflocalsflocal Posts: 6,095member
    I'm impressed with the TB3 SSD products coming out.  I'm certainly looking more and more into purchasing one.  What I'm not a fan of is the design of the enclosures.  From the looks of it, this enclosure could be 1/2 of the size it currently is.  I didn't realize the SSD drives give off that much heat nonetheless, I'll wait for smaller enclosures with better thermal management.  My aim is to have one small enough where I can basically mount it on the back of my iMac and forget about it.  
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 2 of 12
    Mike WuertheleMike Wuerthele Posts: 6,861administrator
    sflocal said:
    I'm impressed with the TB3 SSD products coming out.  I'm certainly looking more and more into purchasing one.  What I'm not a fan of is the design of the enclosures.  From the looks of it, this enclosure could be 1/2 of the size it currently is.  I didn't realize the SSD drives give off that much heat nonetheless, I'll wait for smaller enclosures with better thermal management.  My aim is to have one small enough where I can basically mount it on the back of my iMac and forget about it.  
    I think this one suffers from being a PCI-e enclosure from a size standpoint. There are a few TB3 to M.2 enclosures coming out this year, including ones with multiple drives, and we'll look at them as they arrive.
    edited February 2019 applesnorangesneo-techchiawatto_cobraedred
  • Reply 3 of 12
    Why would you put something so plain ugly next to your Mac. 

    I’d rather have this wich is a touch more and faster. 
    https://www.lacie.com/products/bolt3/

    edited February 2019 watto_cobra
  • Reply 4 of 12
    Why not use an Angelbird Wings PX1 NVMe adapter with a Samsung EVO 970?  You'll get great performance at a fraction of the price.  More than acceptable for the majority of people.  Using in MP5,1 as PCIe boot drive with 140.0.0.0.0 firmware and average about 1,450 MB/s.  Would imagine even faster speeds in PCIe 3.0 devices.  Around $60 for PX1 and around $250 for EVO 970 1TB NVMe vs. $1250+ for Optane 905P... 
  • Reply 5 of 12
    OWC's ThunderBlade1.0TB thunderbolt 3 Solid-State Drive is able to hit 2800MB/s read and 2450MB/s write (3800 if it's in Raid config) for $800? Or am I missing something compared to this one's 1740/2100Mb's $1261 price tag?

    https://eshop.macsales.com/item/OWC/TB3TBV4T01/


    edited February 2019 watto_cobra
  • Reply 6 of 12
    nemaworm said:
    Can't OWC's ThunderBlade1.0TB thunderbolt 3 Solid-State Drive able to hit 2800MB/s read and 2450MB/s write (3800 if it's in Raid config) for $800? Or am I missing something compared to this one's 1740/2100Mb's $1261 price tag?
    At that point look at an NVMe RAID PCIe controller like Highpoint SSD7101 and load it up with four NVMe blades.  No idea the performance under TB3 via PCIe expansion box like Akitio Node Lite but can 20,000 MB/s+ under optimal conditions.  
  • Reply 7 of 12
    Hopefully with the next Mac Pro you can insert/install the Intel Optane 905P SSD directly.


  • Reply 8 of 12
    ciacia Posts: 252member
    Now lets see two of these on in RAID 0. Modern iMacs have 2 separate thunderbolt 3 busses yes?
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 9 of 12
    bsbeamer said:
    Why not use an Angelbird Wings PX1 NVMe adapter with a Samsung EVO 970?  You'll get great performance at a fraction of the price.  More than acceptable for the majority of people.  Using in MP5,1 as PCIe boot drive with 140.0.0.0.0 firmware and average about 1,450 MB/s.  Would imagine even faster speeds in PCIe 3.0 devices.  Around $60 for PX1 and around $250 for EVO 970 1TB NVMe vs. $1250+ for Optane 905P... 
    I must have missed something, This setup is $1,250 for ~ 1TB? I agree external appliance type (prebuilt) chassis are looking ridiculous. You’re setup is exactly right with one caveat.

    I almost went with the Angelbird myself, but ended up putting a high point 7101a in my Mac Pro 5.1 with some 970 Pro’s. Very fast. In a 16x slot each card gets 4 lanes so you actually get much faster transfers closer to 2,500 (I haven’t tested in quite a while and my memory may not be 100. I’m not a numbers geek either. It’s obvious the performance has improved exponentially in my daily workflow. 

    When I was setting it up and testing though, I did a quick test with an EVO and discovered if you need sustained data rates for large files you definitely need to use the 970 pros which are about $400/ TB right now. So, even still my 7101 and 4-1Tb 970 pro’s was about $2k which is still half the price per TB less than something like the Akitio with the same performance. That’s the one thing the Optane brings to the table, sustained memory transfers with large files. For who that matters to? Not most people. I have heard good things about that ssd. 

    The EVO’s tap out “pretty quickly” for large video files. In most other applications with files under 30GB though you’d probably never notice the difference. But you are right to point out there are options over these expensive and frankly unattractive “appliances” not to mention most people don’t need this kind of performance. Even photogs and most creatives. 

    Even if the users machine was thunderbolt only (no pci) I would still recommend buying a chassis, card and memory and build it yourself. It’s cheaper and way more versatile than a proprietary cabinet and card. Even decent PC motherboards will come with m2 slots for Pete’s sake.

    Equally cringeworthy are the super expensive thunderbolt “video cards”. Almost $1k for another non-upgradeable video card? I thought these expansion chassis were supposed to solve the problem not add to it. 
  • Reply 10 of 12
    Mike WuertheleMike Wuerthele Posts: 6,861administrator
    If you can't see your comment, take a minute to re-read the commenting guidelines, conveniently linked at the bottom of the page.
    prismaticsbeowulfschmidt
  • Reply 11 of 12
    h2ph2p Posts: 329member
    Hopefully with the next Mac Pro you can insert/install the Intel Optane 905P SSD directly.
    Maybe so! The next Mac Mod(ular) Pro will have ample expandability!


  • Reply 12 of 12
    nhtnht Posts: 4,522member
    macisit said:
    Why would you put something so plain ugly next to your Mac. 

    I’d rather have this wich is a touch more and faster. 
    https://www.lacie.com/products/bolt3/

    Bolt3 is slower and shows around 978 MBps write and 2000 MBps read in BlackMagic speed test according to PCMag.  Given all you have to really do is run BM speed test multiple times I doubt PCMag screwed that up.
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