Thermaltake has just announced its new MS-1 M.2 SSD cooler, which features a high-speed 8000RPM micro blower fan, heat pipe, and heatsink to keep your ultra-fast (and ultra-hot) Gen5 SSDs as cool as ...
Modern PCIe 4.0 and 5.0 SSDs get pretty warm because the powerful SSD controllers make a lot of heat, like any >1GHz processor. If you expand your PlayStation 5's internal storage with a fast PCIe 4.0 ...
ElecGear has just released a powerful M.2 2280 SSD cooler that can lower the temperatures of high-end SSDs by up to 25 degrees Celsius. The cooler is rather flexible in terms of compatibility due to ...
TeamGroup's new all-in-one cooler targets a desktop PC's CPU as well as its internal SSD. The product represents the “world's first all-in-one ARGB liquid cooling system” that reduces heat from both ...
TeamGroup has just released its new T-FORCE SIREN GD120S AIO Cooler, which is exactly what it sounds like: a new AIO cooler for your SSD, which will keep even the fastest Gen5 SSDs cool. The new ...
How Much Does it Cost? The TeamGroup Z540 M.2 PCIe SSD is available now on Amazon with a price of £257.42, which is pretty competitive given the overall performance and capacity. Sure, it’s not “cheap ...
Gigabyte has introduced a new SSD cooler design for its latest AMD 800-series Aorus Stealth Ice motherboards, called M.2 EZ-Flex. This spring loads the SSD backplate, forcing tighter contact between ...
Alphacool has introduced a new liquid cooled M.2 NVMe SSD in the form of the Core M.2 NVMe PCIe 4.0 Liquid Cooler which features five digitally addressable RGB LED lights enabling you to create a wide ...
SSD makers keep telling us PCI 5.0 drives are going to be hotter, but hot enough to need this? When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.
TeamGroup has just launched a new PC water cooler. That might not be that interesting, you’re probably telling yourself. But with the new Sired Duo360, there’s an interesting wrinkle: This device ...
PCIe 5.0 SSDs are the latest component PC DIYers have to strap a fan to, simply to maintain the advertised level of perky performance. Ample evidence of this is already available, but just how bad ...
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