Wiping a SSD with programs like DBAM do not work on SSDs anyway. This is because wear-leveling, a feature only used by SSDs, distributes writes evenly across every location so one location is not used more than another. Wipe programs work by writing a bunch of random 1s and 0s to storage locations. Wear-leveling will prevent reaching each location.
Plus, the purpose of writing those 1s and 0s is to obliterate any residual magnetism on the disk platters that forensic recovery tools may be able to pick up. SSDs don't use magnetic particles.
Last, the purpose of using a wipe program is to prevent a new owner (or thief/badguy) of the hard drive from discovering any previously stored data. It does NOT make reinstalling Windows go any better.
If you want to start from a "fresh" or clean drive (SSD or HD) just do a quick format first. This will mark all the storage locations as available.