Heat Sinks on NVME drives in Acer Laptops
What are the guidelines for using copper heatsinks in Acer Aspire laptops?
Best Answer
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Yes, a Gen4 drive runs twice a fast as a Gen3 drive and consumes more power that creates more heat. The larger the SSD the more heat it generates. If you only need 1TB storage don't install a 4TB NVMe. I recommend the Samsung 980Pro as that is the most reliable NVMe on the market and runs great on both PCIe 4x4 and 3x4 M.2 slots, but at Gen3 speed on a PCIe 3x4 slot, same price as the older Samsung 970Evo Plus.
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Answers
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For ultra-thin and Nitro laptops some heatsinks will not fit (too thick) and you should apply thermal wrapping instead for >1GB double sided SSDs or the heat dissipation stickers already provided by the vendors, Better Heat Conductivity: Copper has superior heat conductivity compared to aluminum but is more expensive. Laptops with full metallic cases like the Swift X don't need a heatsink for the NVMe SSD.
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Puraw,
Thanks! That is more information than I had to start with.
Follow up questions:
Are certain brand name NVME drive more likely to overheat than others?
Does a Gen 3 x 4 drive get hotter than a Gen 4 x 4 drive? Or vise versa.
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Yes, a Gen4 drive runs twice a fast as a Gen3 drive and consumes more power that creates more heat. The larger the SSD the more heat it generates. If you only need 1TB storage don't install a 4TB NVMe. I recommend the Samsung 980Pro as that is the most reliable NVMe on the market and runs great on both PCIe 4x4 and 3x4 M.2 slots, but at Gen3 speed on a PCIe 3x4 slot, same price as the older Samsung 970Evo Plus.
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Puraw,
I have 980 Pro drives in my Acer Predator. I like those, as well.
I was looking at using a copper layer or cooling tape on the Gen 3 drive (SK Hynix Gold P31, 500 GB) in my Acer Aspire 5.
But, as yet, it does not show signs of overheating.
Kanagawa Tomasu
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