M.2 NVMe SSD idles at 46-50 degrees celsius.

Calculus
Calculus Member Posts: 5 New User
edited November 2023 in 2019 Archives
So I'm a bit worried with my NVME SSD, when gaming it reaches to 65 degrees celsius. I am wondering if this would give issues or will fry my motherboard and if the temps are safe. 
I also ordered heatsink with thermal pads, unfortunately the heatsink fits on my predator but it touches the bottom cover. The bottom cover is slightly curved out after doing so. So I ended up removing the heatsink and left with thermal pads only, because it might damage the plastic back cover of my helios 300. 
I'll be glad if someone could help me with my worries! Thank you and have a nice day!  
Specs:
GTX 1060
i5-8300H
1x8GB 2666 RAM
2TB FireCuda SSHD
256GB NVMe (aData sx6000) 

Best Answers

Answers

  • brummyfan2
    brummyfan2 ACE Posts: 28,438 Trailblazer
    Answer ✓
    Hi,
    I don't think you need to worry too much about the temps, this has happened to others as well, operating temps are between 0-70 degrees according to their data sheet, so just monitor the temps using HWmonitor or similar program, you could also try getting a thin heatsink but I must emphasize that heatsinks are not suitable for laptops. It's normal to get higher temps while gaming, I can not provide any readings for gaming as I don't play any games.
    https://www.adata.com/upload/downloadfile/Datasheet_XPG SX6000_EN_20170921.pdf
    https://www.amazon.com/gp/customer-reviews/R6XWL3GMMOBY5/ref=cm_cr_arp_d_viewpnt?ie=UTF8&ASIN=B076ZWSW7X#R6XWL3GMMOBY5
    https://www.reddit.com/r/buildapc/comments/8g5s1b/please_avoid_adata_m2_sx6000_ssd/

  • Calculus
    Calculus Member Posts: 5 New User
    Hi,
    I don't think you need to worry too much about the temps, this has happened to others as well, operating temps are between 0-70 degrees according to their data sheet, so just monitor the temps using HWmonitor or similar program, you could also try getting a thin heatsink but I must emphasize that heatsinks are not suitable for laptops. It's normal to get higher temps while gaming, I can not provide any readings for gaming as I don't play any games.
    https://www.adata.com/upload/downloadfile/Datasheet_XPG SX6000_EN_20170921.pdf
    https://www.amazon.com/gp/customer-reviews/R6XWL3GMMOBY5/ref=cm_cr_arp_d_viewpnt?ie=UTF8&ASIN=B076ZWSW7X#R6XWL3GMMOBY5
    https://www.reddit.com/r/buildapc/comments/8g5s1b/please_avoid_adata_m2_sx6000_ssd/

    Seems like I don't have any choice but to stop my worries. My heatsink was already thin enough, around 3mm, it is just unfortunate that the location of m.2 is kinda off. Anyway, thanks for the reply. Have a nice day ahead! 
  • xapim
    xapim ACE Posts: 7,253 Pathfinder
    Answer ✓
    Calculus said:
    Hi,
    I don't think you need to worry too much about the temps, this has happened to others as well, operating temps are between 0-70 degrees according to their data sheet, so just monitor the temps using HWmonitor or similar program, you could also try getting a thin heatsink but I must emphasize that heatsinks are not suitable for laptops. It's normal to get higher temps while gaming, I can not provide any readings for gaming as I don't play any games.
    https://www.adata.com/upload/downloadfile/Datasheet_XPG SX6000_EN_20170921.pdf
    https://www.amazon.com/gp/customer-reviews/R6XWL3GMMOBY5/ref=cm_cr_arp_d_viewpnt?ie=UTF8&ASIN=B076ZWSW7X#R6XWL3GMMOBY5
    https://www.reddit.com/r/buildapc/comments/8g5s1b/please_avoid_adata_m2_sx6000_ssd/

    Seems like I don't have any choice but to stop my worries. My heatsink was already thin enough, around 3mm, it is just unfortunate that the location of m.2 is kinda off. Anyway, thanks for the reply. Have a nice day ahead! 
    As @brumm@brummyfan2 said i wouldn't worry about it just want to add that i also read about ppl using thermal pads in the m.2/nvme drives chips to try to cool them down but again it's just speculation


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  • Deejay_tech
    Deejay_tech Member Posts: 356 Seasoned Practitioner WiFi Icon
    Answer ✓
    Calculus said:
    So I'm a bit worried with my NVME SSD, when gaming it reaches to 65 degrees celsius. I am wondering if this would give issues or will fry my motherboard and if the temps are safe. 
    I also ordered heatsink with thermal pads, unfortunately the heatsink fits on my predator but it touches the bottom cover. The bottom cover is slightly curved out after doing so. So I ended up removing the heatsink and left with thermal pads only, because it might damage the plastic back cover of my helios 300. 
    I'll be glad if someone could help me with my worries! Thank you and have a nice day!  
    Specs:
    GTX 1060
    i5-8300H
    1x8GB 2666 RAM
    2TB FireCuda SSHD
    256GB NVMe (aData sx6000) 

    using only just the thermal pads is the worst thing you can do. with no metal ( aluminium/ copper) to transfer the heat from the ssd to the surrounding air. the heat will get trapped in the thermal pad and accumulate there due to lack of metals to xfer the heat to the surrounding air.
    better remove the thermal pads or if you are a bit diy'er then use a thin 1mm copper aluminium plate on the thermal pad (diy stuff).
    just using thermal pad serves no purpose and infact can damage the ssd chips in the long run.
    My personal Acer m/c's
    1) Gaming: Acer Predator Helios 300 PH315-51
    Config:Core i5 8300H, 16GB, 250GB SSD, 1TB HDD, 1050ti GPU

    2) Daily Use: Acer Aspire A315-53  59GR
    Config: Core i5 8250u, 8GB, 256 SSD, 1TB HDD, IPS FHD 

    3) Linux Learning: Acer Aspire A315-53 P4MY
    Config: Pentium Gold 4417U, 8 GB, 256 SSD, 500GB HDD.
  • Calculus
    Calculus Member Posts: 5 New User
    Calculus said:
    So I'm a bit worried with my NVME SSD, when gaming it reaches to 65 degrees celsius. I am wondering if this would give issues or will fry my motherboard and if the temps are safe. 
    I also ordered heatsink with thermal pads, unfortunately the heatsink fits on my predator but it touches the bottom cover. The bottom cover is slightly curved out after doing so. So I ended up removing the heatsink and left with thermal pads only, because it might damage the plastic back cover of my helios 300. 
    I'll be glad if someone could help me with my worries! Thank you and have a nice day!  
    Specs:
    GTX 1060
    i5-8300H
    1x8GB 2666 RAM
    2TB FireCuda SSHD
    256GB NVMe (aData sx6000) 

    using only just the thermal pads is the worst thing you can do. with no metal ( aluminium/ copper) to transfer the heat from the ssd to the surrounding air. the heat will get trapped in the thermal pad and accumulate there due to lack of metals to xfer the heat to the surrounding air.
    better remove the thermal pads or if you are a bit diy'er then use a thin 1mm copper aluminium plate on the thermal pad (diy stuff).
    just using thermal pad serves no purpose and infact can damage the ssd chips in the long run.
    I forgot to mention that I am also using the stock super slim metal heatsink that came with the NVMe SSD. 
    So this is how it looks like. NVME ssd > thermal pads > slim metal heatsink. 
    Tho' that one that I've order had a risers (parallel lines). Which is why I think that it is better than the stock i have.