You need to consider your use case. Unless you have some really strict purpose beyond speed. These are pool disks. Not sure why you'd want to pay for enterprise features and internal power protection. If a drive drops, who cares. That is the point of 'RAID' Z. Look at the Samsung 850 EVO's. If you don't think they'll survive, buy the pro's. Intel drives are known for their consistent write speeds. So we love em for SLOGS, but there are new players in that game. 845DC's are beautiful... but double.
Honestly, with that many ssd's even with cheapy 500MB/s. You are going to be tapping bottle-necks all over. Samba and clock speeds, possibly controllers, even multiple 10GB connections. Pool design, protocol selection, even latency differences between fiber and copper, every little thing starts to matter... or you are throwing resources at this pool that can't BEGIN to stretch its legs.
EVEN then, if you can't hit the ARC.... you've done yourself a disservice. It takes pretty specific workloads, and usage scenario's to require this kind of speed and cost. At that point trueFLASH and the support to make this thing really hit it's potential should be considered, imho.
Good Luck.