WYP News Guru Nov 25, 2023 #1 Team Group's T-Force Siren GD120S AIO SSD Cooler forces the hottest SSDs to chill out. Read more about Team Group's T-Force Siren GD120S AIO SSD Cooler.
Team Group's T-Force Siren GD120S AIO SSD Cooler forces the hottest SSDs to chill out. Read more about Team Group's T-Force Siren GD120S AIO SSD Cooler.
WYP News Guru Nov 27, 2023 #3 Dicehunter said: Or.... could just make cooler running controllers ^_^ Click to expand... Yeah. But then PCIe 6.0 will come and make controllers hot again. It is a viscious cycle. Early PCIe 4.0 SSDs were hot too.
Dicehunter said: Or.... could just make cooler running controllers ^_^ Click to expand... Yeah. But then PCIe 6.0 will come and make controllers hot again. It is a viscious cycle. Early PCIe 4.0 SSDs were hot too.
Dawelio Active member Nov 28, 2023 #4 WYP said: Yeah. But then PCIe 6.0 will come and make controllers hot again. It is a viscious cycle. Early PCIe 4.0 SSDs were hot too. Click to expand... True, but strapping an literal AIO on an M.2 SSD? Really? I mean come on. If it was part of an custom loop I'd kinda understand, but an stand alone simply for the drive itself?... Seems very overkill, unnecessary and plain impractical to me lol.
WYP said: Yeah. But then PCIe 6.0 will come and make controllers hot again. It is a viscious cycle. Early PCIe 4.0 SSDs were hot too. Click to expand... True, but strapping an literal AIO on an M.2 SSD? Really? I mean come on. If it was part of an custom loop I'd kinda understand, but an stand alone simply for the drive itself?... Seems very overkill, unnecessary and plain impractical to me lol.
D Damien c Active member Nov 28, 2023 #5 Then lose performance when it runs too cold, iirc the drives should run around 40c in order to perform at "Optimal" speed and meet life expectancy.
Then lose performance when it runs too cold, iirc the drives should run around 40c in order to perform at "Optimal" speed and meet life expectancy.