You should try it.
I love running without a pagefile if I have enough ram. As a result my system never slows down as long as ram is available. The huge difference is when I start an application and don't use it for a while and then come back to it. With a pagefile that application would take a while to come up as it loaded from disk, but with no pagefile everything is always fast.
Now since everything is in ram, everything including virtual memory and cache is in the ram and it is amazing how quickly it can go through ram, even 16 GB.
If you ram is sufficient the only downside with not having a pagefile is that you cannot do a dump of any kind in the event of a BSOD. Hopefully it will never happen, but if it does that info can be very useful.
Personally I mostly use a fixed page file (1-2GB) and I noticed that regardless of the configured size or drive, the system period slows down as some unused apps are always cached.
Running no page file is the best option, if you run into issues I would recommend a small 1-2 GB page file and slowly increase if it is not enough but that is not likely.
Also, make sure you disable as much paging, pre-fetching or caching as it would only eat ram and wear on your SSD.