Is This Worth Doing?

Right now I have a Samsung 250GB SSD as my boot drive and a bunch of HDD's just connected individually for backup and extra storage. Right now I load my games from a slower HDD and I'm not happy with how slow larger games load. I'm thinking the solution is to format my SSD, install windows temporarily on a HDD, use intel SRT to create a partition on my SSD to use as cache, Make another partition on my SSD and install windows on that, make a Raid 0 setup on my 3 2TB HDD's, use the SSD cache partition on the Raid 0 setup, and move all my games to the Raid 0 setup. Then just use my 3TB HDD, slower 2TB HDD, 500GB HDD, and 500GB external HDD as backup/extra storage if necessary. So that way I'll have 6TB of slow reliable storage, 6TB of faster but less reliable and SSD accelerated storage, and 186GB of very fast SSD storage.
 
It should work yes.

But do remember that if you are going to use the SSD drive as a form of caching, that it will be subjected to a lot of extra read and write cycles per day depending on how much you use your system in a single day.

It will wear down the Flash memory cells used of the SSD drive much quicker.
Because most of the time with home user based pc`s for example.
A game is installed say on a SSD drive, then for the rest of the time once installed it is read from more often than written to.
With a Cache setup on a created partition of the SSD drive it will frequently be written to pre buffering data constantly for what is running.
 


I have a 5 year warranty. So.. Yeah. I'm OK with that. And if it fails outside of the 5 year warranty period I can just buy another one pretty easily considering the price is only less than $100 for a 250GB SSD. So I'm not really all that worried about it wearing out faster. But... I do have a 32GB SSD I could use instead. Though it would be much slower and I'd have to get it back from my uncle who I let borrow it. But let's be real here. I'm not keeping it for 5 years anyway. It's most likely getting replaced with a larger and faster SSD before the warranty period is up anyway. I like to upgrade pretty often and I'm sure I won't keep it the way it is for 5 years.