Simply writing at a rate of 220 gigabytes per second produced a temperature of 66 degrees Celsius. During the recording, the temperature in the room was set at 25, but the bench crystal showed 2200. At the same time, the temperature was increased up to 75 degrees. In addition to that, I have a blowout over there. My slot is located above the video card, and air is being pushed there by the fan. That is to say, there is a limited amount of air. I can't function without a radiator. And more robust. I am relieved that the elements are on one side, but the temperature readings from the sensors inside indicate that it is 5 degrees hotter than it should be. This could indicate that there is something hotter coming from below. In general, only four stars; as this is a star, it heats up quite a bit and needs a radiator, but the seller does not even advise you about the necessity of the radiator. It's a good bet, in my opinion, that folks are experiencing all of these power outages due to the hellishly high temperatures. My processor has great cooling, with a maximum temperature of 65 degrees while under duress (E5 1650 V1).
SanDisk Extreme 240GB 2 5 Inch Height
20 Review
Crucial BX500 480GB SATA Internal SSD πΎ with 3D NAND Technology, Up to 540MB/s - CT480BX500SSD1Z
51 Review
GIGABYTE SSD 240GB GP-GSTFS31240GNTD: Boost Performance with Lightning-Fast Storage
21 Review
Adata XPG SX8200 Pro 1TB NVMe SSD with 3D NAND, Gen3x4 PCIe M.2 2280, R/W 3500/3000MB/s (ASX8200PNP-1TT-C)
31 Review
8TB Seagate Backup Plus Hub Desktop Hard Drive with Data Recovery Services
56 Review
18 TB External HDD Western Digital WD Elements Desktop, USB 3.0, black
95 Review
Game console Microsoft Xbox One X 1000 GB HDD, black
53 Review
2 TB External HDD Western Digital WD Elements Portable (WDBU), USB 3.0, black
84 Review