Header banner
Revain logoHome Page
Jasneet Jazzy photo
1 Level
786 Review
92 Karma

Review on πŸ’§ EKWB EK M.2 NVMe Heatsink Nickel by Jasneet Jazzy

Revainrating 4 out of 5

Cools pretty well and evens out temperature differences Dual NVMe

ASRock Z390 Extreme 4 motherboard comes with a heatsink for the "bottom" MVMe drive. My mid-tower case has two 120mm fans in the front and one in the back, all running at around 900 RPM. The 500GB 970 EVO PLUS, which houses the OS, ran about 7-10C cooler than the top drive. With a heat sink, the difference is smoothed out a bit: The upper pane now only heats up 2-4Β°C warmer. warmer operation of the upper drive to the lower drive in the path of greater and smoother airflow. And that massive heatsink. The advantage of the EKWB heatsink is that I don't have to shift the fan speed in favor of the top drive. Data is operated at 10-12 Β° C during video processing and large file compression. They heat up quickly and cool down quickly after completing the task. Therefore, during Windows 10 updates, the operating system hard drive heats up the most. The EKWB EK-M.2 heatsink is certainly effective in reducing the operating temperature during normal workstation operation and idle. Additionally, it proved a winner in high-level stress tests, as detailed here, as well as in reports published on gaming and technology forums and websites. I see no need to beat my new good rims for this review. Since I don't game, I only need the i9-9900K UHD 630 graphics, I can't comment on the performance in that area. However, I took a star off my rating for ridiculous instructions and downright awful clips.

Pros
  • nice thing
Cons
  • I don't remember, but something happened