F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Coolers for NVMe drives

Coolers for NVMe drives

Coolers for NVMe drives

X
XxgamerxX1677
Member
214
04-26-2016, 12:37 AM
#1
Hello there, fellow builder. I'm putting together a Pi right now and it already has a decent cooling setup I’m satisfied with. My project also includes an NVMe drive. Because I have some spare heatsinks meant for Pi components and chips nearby, I wondered if I could attach them to the NVMe chips. It’s unlikely they’ll make much difference since those parts probably won’t face heavy loads. They’re mainly there for aesthetics. I’m a bit worried about placing them because the chips are made of black plastic rather than metal, and those sticky pads on the bottom might interfere. Could this actually trap heat instead of letting it escape? Might the pads even damage the chips by making them brittle too fast? For your reference, these are the type of heatsinks you mentioned—they have those little adhesive pads at the base. Any thoughts or experiences would be greatly appreciated!
X
XxgamerxX1677
04-26-2016, 12:37 AM #1

Hello there, fellow builder. I'm putting together a Pi right now and it already has a decent cooling setup I’m satisfied with. My project also includes an NVMe drive. Because I have some spare heatsinks meant for Pi components and chips nearby, I wondered if I could attach them to the NVMe chips. It’s unlikely they’ll make much difference since those parts probably won’t face heavy loads. They’re mainly there for aesthetics. I’m a bit worried about placing them because the chips are made of black plastic rather than metal, and those sticky pads on the bottom might interfere. Could this actually trap heat instead of letting it escape? Might the pads even damage the chips by making them brittle too fast? For your reference, these are the type of heatsinks you mentioned—they have those little adhesive pads at the base. Any thoughts or experiences would be greatly appreciated!

I
Infinity991
Member
62
04-26-2016, 09:32 AM
#2
The NVMe storage device you're considering is suitable given the Pi's performance limitations. You should be comfortable without an additional heatsink.
I
Infinity991
04-26-2016, 09:32 AM #2

The NVMe storage device you're considering is suitable given the Pi's performance limitations. You should be comfortable without an additional heatsink.

_
_NovaZone_
Member
156
05-17-2016, 04:38 PM
#3
WD Blue Sn580
_
_NovaZone_
05-17-2016, 04:38 PM #3

WD Blue Sn580

S
Sara_Sampaio
Member
138
05-18-2016, 06:14 PM
#4
That's understandable. I guess I'm probably getting too caught up in thinking.
S
Sara_Sampaio
05-18-2016, 06:14 PM #4

That's understandable. I guess I'm probably getting too caught up in thinking.

M
masterofmen12
Member
56
05-18-2016, 06:54 PM
#5
You wouldn't need a heatsink unless there are problems then.
M
masterofmen12
05-18-2016, 06:54 PM #5

You wouldn't need a heatsink unless there are problems then.

K
Keveley
Junior Member
12
05-19-2016, 01:19 PM
#6
A midrange PCIe4 SSD stays cool, delivering quicker speeds over 6GB/s. Only heavy tasks demand extra cooling, and even then it performs well under light loads.
K
Keveley
05-19-2016, 01:19 PM #6

A midrange PCIe4 SSD stays cool, delivering quicker speeds over 6GB/s. Only heavy tasks demand extra cooling, and even then it performs well under light loads.