"First it was CPUs...Now SSDs are starting the process..."
"...Nvidia found a way to make the chipset so hot..."
I'm almost certain that there is a mechanism at work here called "progress". (With all due respect, there is a slight problem with the logic involved in the 'Nvidia Example'; some would say that, by making a more powerful chipset, Nvidia found they had a chipset which consumed more power; which. of course, generated more heat...which needed to be dissipated somehow).
As I see it, one has only two choices:
1) accept the fact that building ever-more-powerful integrated circuits in--approximately--the same-sized packages will result in higher heat generation, with ever more sophisticated heat-dissipation and heat-mitigation techniques required; and/or
2) deny that a problem exists. This technique was tried by the firm known for their--to this day--continuing engineering wizardry, the Raspberry Pi organization. Eben Upton tried his utmost to deny that there was heat problem with the (then) new Raspberry Pi 3. This, in the face of overwhelming amounts of irrefutable published evidence consisting of hard data AND thermal images, from very many sources.
This choice didn't work for Eben Upton.
It won't work for you.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
SilverStone TP04 M.2 SSD Cooling
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by DanL View Post
You forgot the NB/SB chipset. Nvidia found a way to make the chipset so hot, it needed active cooling.
I'm still waiting for someone to build a case with an AC fan.
Leave a comment:
-
Originally posted by Teggs View PostFirst it was CPUs..How long until an NVME SSD requires active cooling?
I'm still waiting for someone to build a case with an AC fan.
- Likes 3
Leave a comment:
-
First it was CPUs, progressing to the point where a 'normal' cooler can have multiple 120mm fans and a hunk of metal that may not even fit in an otherwise normal-looking case. GPUs started later and took longer to ramp up, but any GPU worth spit is now actively cooled. RAM has mostly stayed under control so far, most of the heat spreaders have been gimmicks and not necessary, though I have heard rumblings about DDR5 needing them due to onboard processing.
Now SSDs are starting the process. How long until an NVME SSD requires active cooling? PCIe 5? PCIe 6? I don't look forward to yet another fan in the system, or the motherboard redesigns and increased cost either. :/
- Likes 3
Leave a comment:
-
SilverStone TP04 M.2 SSD Cooling
Phoronix: SilverStone TP04 M.2 SSD Cooling
With proper heatsinks becoming all the more important with speedy PCI Express 4.0 NVMe SSDs to avoid thermal throttling, SilverStone has been among the vendors offering after-market aluminum heatsinks designed for M.2 2280 drives. The SilverStone TP04 is a simple but effective aluminum alloy SSD cooling kit for about $17 USD.
Tags: None
Leave a comment: