Cooling Your SSD with a Heatsink – DIY in 5 Ep 195

preview_player
Показать описание
Do SSDs need a heatsink? If you’re pushing your gaming machine hard, you might find the answer is yes.

What is a heatsink?
A heatsink moves heat away from a device. They’re typically make of highly conductive materials so they can quickly absorb and dissipate heat. When PCs draw more power, they can generate more heat, which requires heatsinks to disperse. All modern CPUs and GPUs need heatsinks. Many even have an additional fan or liquid cooling to keep from overheating. But why are SSDs adopting them?

Do we need them?
Initially SSDs had form factors similar to HDDs. As the market matured, Flash grew smaller and sleeker. Most internal drives are in the M.2 format, the size and shape of a stick of gum. As well as being cable-free, M.2 supports the NVMe protocol and PCIe interface. This protocol was written so SSDs could take full advantage of their speed, reading and writing in parallel. SSDs sprint where hard disk drives only walk. However, sprinting creates heat for computers as well as humans. The waste heat caused by power usage of high-speed SSDs can be sufficient to endanger the safe operation of the system. To avoid this, SSDs will throttle their performance to avoid damage. That’s good: you don’t want to fry your drive because it’s working too hard. However, it also means your drive will slow down when you’re using it the most.
Sony has stated all SSDs added to a PS5 need a heatsink. Thanks Sony! Other video and design software engineers may not have Sony’s voice, but the principles are the same. Intense usage can necessitate a heatsink to avoid failure, especially in areas with low airflow. But heatsink manufacturers are doing their best to keep performance sustainable. The Kingston FURY Renegade PCIe 4.0 NVMe M.2 SSD with heatsink can sustain read speeds of 7,300MB/s, and write speeds of 7,000MB/s.

What makes a good heatsink?
The material used in the conductor and the heatsink design is crucial. Aluminum and graphene make great conducting materials. Both have a remarkable ability to dissipate heat. Kingston’s FURY Renegade PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSD with heatsink is made from a graphene-aluminum combo. These materials are a factor in unit cost, as is the design. However, better materials and designs mean a better job of cooling the drive.
It's easy to make this decision when manufacturers like Kingston list their performance numbers with their heatsinks. Once you figure out your sustain read/write requirements, you can select a heatsink accordingly. And then you will have the upper hand over your friends with unprotected SSDs, and win even when skill suggests you shouldn’t…

Got questions about the video or Kingston products? COMMENT or contact us on SOCIAL MEDIA:
__________________________________
SUBSCRIBE for more DIY in 5 videos, and receive updates on the latest in Kingston’s memory & storage development, plus guides on getting peak performance from your hardware:

0:00 Intro
0:43 What is a heatsink
1:13 Do we need them
3:18 What makes a good heatsink?
4:04 Outro
Рекомендации по теме
Комментарии
Автор

How is this possible. How does Ms. Hersberger continually get more lovely?

PEDoers
Автор

A graphene heatsink? I've never heard of that before, but it sounds super cool! Literally - haha!

justin_time
Автор

I just love it when I learn new stuff from Mia.

juniedepano
Автор

Just to clarify, ive just brought the kingston fury renegade 2tb for the rog ally x. Since it has a heat spreader already on it, will that be fine just to put in without an additional heatsink. Because there isnt much room in it.

svenkilik
Автор

So should we peel the sticker from kc3000 or not? Whats the exact temp delta?

arturperzyna
Автор

Two points -
a. SSD heatsink choice often boils down to how much breathing room is there above the m.2 slot. If you have a chonky GPU or other PCI-E card, one or more m.2 slots may fit in an SSD, but not one with a powerful heatsink, graphene, aluminium, kryptonitium or otherewise.
b. Please point out that a lot of the SSD heating is due to the excess hot air circulating in the case from the CPU or GPU fans. Adding more heat sinks - to RAMs and now to SSDs, do not address the elephant in the room - CPUs and GPUs are geenrating more heat with each passing generation and now far outstrip the amount of heat generated by either RAM or VRMs or SSDs. If you could address this issue then the smaller problems will solve themselves.

AritraMajumdar
Автор

my laptop has a very tight space to cool my secondary m2 SSD....any tip?

strongerthanyoucanimagine
Автор

I just upgraded my 3 year old 500gb Nvme with a WD 2tb Nvme. I cloned the drive and instantly windows was freezing and random blue screens. I reformatted and cloned again and same results. Put the old one back and it works perfectly. So I’ve ordered a heat sink for the new one and hopefully that will solve this issue.

westfield
Автор

Nvme gen 5 will produce more heat then intel or amd old cpus

Stanislav
Автор

When did cheap PLC ssd are coming. I need to store my photo and songs. I just want to use it as data storage for long time. I don't need super speed. Sequential read 50-60 Mbps is enough to play my movies and photos.

Maolana_ModiG
Автор

It's a shame that performance case fans make intolerable noise. It can take only one industrial fan to make an icebox out of your case. I need to upgrade my heatsink.

steven.events
Автор

not reallyan issue while playing a game ~ more so with masive read and write files

valentusslimroast
Автор

I love this cheek and I don't know why

StifeAnnos-wwnq
Автор

Useless content for me. Sorry, diddnt find information about cooling nvm i was looking for.

Not even hands on footage

arturperzyna
Автор

lol shes a girl and shes talking computers

MayhemMilIer
Автор

compre un disco ssd kimgston en una tienda me vendieron imitación no el original hay muchas imitaciones o mejor dicho falso kingston mejoren las seguridad de sus disco o una señal para darnos cuenta cual es es original y cual no es

caminante