PCI-e 5.0 SSD is hitting 11W at sustained write operations. So , it is a possibility. But likely the M.2 connector has to go because M.2 specs requires 3.3V at 2A. We're hitting 3A on PCI-e 4.0 SSD these days.
Bought the (similar) copper one some time ago. The cooling is actually impressive with just a little bit of airflow from a nearby case fan. Installed it on the rear M.2 slot on an ITX motherboard, result was a good 20 to 24 degrees drop. The difficulty is mounting space & positioning so it can benefit from some airflow inside the case.
Yea that’s exactly what I was thinking when he reviled the results of the last cooler. Seems to relies on air flow from either nearby case fan or gpu fans pulling air up.
my first 80mm fan cooler was for an AMD duron that drew around 40 watts or something. A small little m.2 cooler this size would probably have done the job back then, given they came delidded. This looks quite promising for modern drives that keep increasing the power draw of the controller for more performance. Also wild to think that the controller on my drives is probably faster than that Duron as well xD, it was only like 750mhz or something and had way less cache xD edit: im half delirious rn with a cold and a ton of benadryl in me, shold clarify im talking about the 2nd cooler that was shown off, not the ROG one lol.
@@TheOriginalFaxon Another Duron gamer 💪 I remember swapping it out for an athlon 850 that ran at a cool 1ghz literally.. remember when cpu's actually fried themselves at 95c instead of it being normal boosting temps?
@@interlace84 Was just about to say, my teen years were full of lawn-mowing/landscaping summers, followed by PC component upgrades a few weeks before school started back up, lol, year in, year out. Spent I think 550 USD and bought the AMD Athlon 64 X2 (The worlds first consumer grade dual-core! What an absolute fucking disaster of a product line) Same story as Linus Sebastian on that one. What an expensive, EXPENSIVE mistake, especially being 14 years old and having to work a couple months to make that kind of money, lmao. I remember when simply running hot would kill CPUs.
@@flintfrommother3gaming basically all dedicated AI hardware requires you to convert a tensorflow/onnx/etc model to a hardware-specific variant and this is usually done with a proprietary software suite. I would like for more standardisation but the industry is still very young so it's hard to establish a more universal approach...
I'd like to see the copper one (JeYi) in a situation where it's using the down firing airflow from a GPU to provide additional cooling air (IE, its presumed intended use case.) I know the GPU will be providing warmer air, but it might be a fun surprise.
It's probably pronounced "Jay Yee". Yes, any forced convection airflow through the fin gaps should help a lot. They should have left the fin gaps open at the top to allow the air entry to the gaps from multiple angles.
got it today, my temps are from 48°C to 56°C using my mobo stock cooler (Aorus b550m pro-p) that tbh is just a crappy heat trap, I'll let you know how well the Jeyi works, just give me a few days
I cannot believe how good these videos are. All this cheap/alternator AliExpress stuff is absolutely amazing. Definitely keep it a trend please. Maybe delve into other thing?!
That M.2 Three cooler should make one hell of a good passive cooler, if it can fit without blocking other PCIe slots without the fan. I think GPU fans should provide more than enough airflow for any modern SSD with that kind of overkill heat sink.
that one lets me think if its ment for some kind Crypto mining useing m2 drives,i know there are cryptocoins that are beeing mined useing ssds already..
Would love to see a light airflow version of the testing for the coolers that are clearly banking on the system having some airflow. Especially that Jeyi copper one. That was the cooler I was looking at using before I decided to just go full diy and go for a copper heatsink and mount it myself. (I have not done this yet.)
M.2 Tree would be decent even without the fan, wouldn't it? You could try the Jayi Q80 as well. It has parallel to the longer side fins, and you can maybe add a random 4cm fan to improve whatever performance it has. Anyway, I think that any diy power led lamp enthusiast welcomes these small, but sometimes fair enough coolers. Of course I am talking about those solutions, which at least look like a usable heatsink.
Would be nice to see at least 1-2 cooler tests done in a normal enclosed tower(w gpu) to see 'real world' performance temps, then emulate the rest of the coolers numbers in chart. Thanks for the comparisons and sacrifices :D What is the wait time of aliexpress products?
JEYI makes also makes the "Snowpard M.2 cooler" which is very strange as it contains a M.2 PCB riser card which flips the orientation of the SSD. It also extends beyond the M.2 slot in both directions making it look like a motherboard mounted heatsink.
Jiushark is the brand that made the JF13K 240mm topdown CPU cooler, they like humongous heatsinks everywhere. It would be a nice thing to review as well.
That silver vertical stack with heat pipes and fan cooler was cute as a button. It would probably work great on a Laptop CPU if anyone wanted to pull one out of a case and convert it into a desktop :P I don't know, maybe if you got gifted a laptop you didn't care much about and needed a backup PC or wanted to make some Frankenstein home media pc or lightweight gaming rig for the living room, etc.
This M.2 cooler video series, reminds me of the attempts to cool North and South bridge chipsets. Especially remember the ones that were "designed" for use with SLI and crossfire uses. 🤣
Most of these cooler, specially the finned and tower-style ones will greatly benefit from O11 Type cases where air intake is usually on the bottom. At that point only clearance is probably an issue.
Who remembers the Thermalright HR-05 northbridge chipset tower cooler ? 2007 era, single heatpipe , about the same size as this M.2 THREE unit. Great little ripper, I still own it.
Yeah, Jeyi looks like it would get a big boost from the GPU intake fan with that tall fin stack. Gelid would be fine on a storage M.2 for looks, is my thoughts on it. As for the huge tower, you could put a pair of them into one of the MSI boards with the double SSDs in a row, to benefit also from bottom case fans maybe. But a bit overkill. Great review, as always. Also, I agree, the Jeyi was a gorgeous cooler, that polished copper and matte black was a piece of art.
One thing i see about each pc build is that hot air from gpu gets recycled back into fan intake and fins, so best it would be to have the shroud connected to a duct at the back or front without leaks.
Your 3700X is drawing over that quite often. It has a 65W TDP, but modern CPUs will exceed that TDP rating under load so long as there is thermal headroom. But yes, your CPU could run at TDP on that M.2 cooler.
The finnscold heatsink looks pretty sick, and I think they're thinking that if you put it right next to the GPU it might take advantage of intake airflow to the GPU. You're also missing a newline at the end of each Timestamp chapter thingy
In the next test benchmark it would be nice to see the M.2 Three performance without the fan in open bench vs closed real case. As it would be appealing to use it without the fan if the performance would be there with regular case airflow.
jonsbo has M.2-3 a low profile heatsink with diagonal wedges for good compatibility of airflows and decent metal mass for burst workloads, for double-side ssd and also comes with phase change heat pad.
I have two JEYI RGB Coolers on my SSDs. They don’t have the fine copper fins but more coarser Aluminum fins and some RGB on top. Very well made and the SSDs max out at around 50C.
Sometimes I think the failure of the cheap heat sink comes from the low-grade thermal transfer sticky pads they come with that may be simple foam tape. The heat is just not getting to the heat sinks proper. The tests should be tried with known-quality thermal pads too. I had a similar issue with cheap thermal paste. The good stuff made a huge difference.
My personal thought was always "is it possible to add a cooler to a laptop?" My original idea was "why not move the entire finstack to the back of the laptop and make that part of the chasis of the laptop very open?". That way any cooling pad or even any air movement thru there would be much better than the restrictive finstacks with small fans that we have in laptops today. Then I thought you could even add a USB fan (or more like a few in line) and use it as a "tilting of the laptop" and extra airflow. I think the MSI Titan does this to an extent. Maybe surface area ain't enough?
The M.2 Three intrigues me. I would like to see it tested on a lower end CPU, like a Ryzen R5 7600, 5600, 5500, 3600 (all 65 W TDP) and see how well it cools them. The small size could work in an SFF or ITX build and if it works Ok on this sort of 6 C 12T CPU, it should be 'fine'. I would suggest zip ties to affix it.
The tower cooler is the one I most liked. Your use of it on the CPU is what sold me. TBH there are low profile coolers about the same size that would cool about as well. I prefer to use some of these when I can. If the intel stock cooler was beefed up a bit with more mass and/or fins they could be quite a reasonable design. I have an old one from Arctic Cooling that is a basic 'starfish' design that keeps my Ryzen 3600 under 80C all the time. I also use an even older AM3 design from them that keeps things nice under my load scenarios. It just depends on the case to be used.
GELID made great budget coolers back then. I remember running the Tranquillo on my 2500K back then, it was giant and 4.5Ghz daily was no problem, it was like 30 bucks. Then later on the Phatom Black dual tower cooler also great and was like 40 bucks.
Just saw another Jiushark product on LTT channel. It is a CPU cooler with a flat profile with some decent cooling performance for the price. That company looks legit.
The RGB cooler remind me of a case Jay stumbled accross when troubleshooting a viewer PC. Long story short : The RGB on the SSD (2.5" one) was outputing so much heat that the disk would just overheat and stop working So even if the heatsink work, covering it with RGB doesn't seems that smart
I think the last one would benefit from a normal use case. I think the fin are oriented in that way because above there is the gpu fan pulling air between the fin. Not much because there is large gap between the gpu and the m.2 but i think it would perform better.
I love the way you go out of your way to buy the worst crap available and test it with a seriousness it in no way deserves. Better than retro-encabulators ;)
I think you need to reconsider some parts of your testing when it comes to these SSD coolers, the JeYi cooler looked like it would work a lot better if the mainboard was vertical, to aid convection airflow. I don't know how well that would apply to the other ones but that one seemed like it would benefit the most from a different orientation.
The JEYI cooler would perform well I think ... motherboard is mostly vertical mounted, so the dissipation of heat would be a lot better then horizontal mounted, I think ... And I agree, it got the best looks !
Only a 2 heat pipe cooler with an 8cm fan haven for ~130-135W Xeon E5-1620 v1 in a Lenovo S30 by factory. At CPU full load is not silent, but solve the job without throttling. But that true of course, much EZr cooling down a 22nm chip.
wish you'd tried the tower m.2 cooer without the fan installed, that would stop it from blocking the slots next to it and it might still work really well
Jeyi Finscold Q150 really cool, but have got design flows. Aluminum base and Copper fins aren't properly connected. I think after Gill Boyd video JEYI fixed a bit construction, but not sure. I think they just should invert construction - let copper fins touch thermal pad on SSD and aluminum base just close "sandwich".
The big problem with using the top M2 slot is the SSD absorbs tons of GPU heat while gaming. Shouldn't be a big deal as you aren't doing an extended read/write, but it is noticeable.
I have that Gelid radiator, using it on my 970 Evo plus 1Tb. I'm getting a reduction of about 15 degreees Celsius with it, I'm fine with that, considering the fact it was 1$ during a sale, can't really complain for that price.
i got a copper one with fins oriented facing the front intake fans and it has a small fan in front and blows air in between the copper fins to the back... gives decent cooling to my m.2 gen4
Please test JF13K 😊 That tower cooler would no doubt perform much better with a slightly larger fan that got some airflow over the pipes, and a clamping mechanism. Seriously considering it for my Mini-STX with x8 GT710 and NVMe to PCIe adapter. Still looking for something like a standard tower case but very smol to put it in.
If active cooling of M.2 drives is going to become necessary they surely need to come up with some sort of better and more universal solution. I never really liked seeing M.2 become a port on motherboards, just seems like a real clunky solution when PC cases have so much free space for drives that could be better utilised. Mounting drives in cooled bays makes a lot more sense than mounting them to motherboards where space is always at a premium, especially if they're going to need active cooling.
I don't understand how they expect these coolers to fit when GPUs sits right on top of the M.2 slot... very few motherboards actually have an M.2 slot ABOVE the GPU. But even then, the remaining M.2 slots are below the PCIe/GPU slot
This is the definitive deep dive into the ultimate M.2 coolers. Definitive what I'm just not sure yet, but nonetheless can't wait for the final installment. 👍🏻👍🏻
There's a nice one by Icybox, that you should review. It uses a 30mm fan and dual copper heat pipes. I have one, it works reducing max temperatures by about 20 degree C, on a Sabrent Rocket plus 1tb.
NGL I'm gravitating towards Aliexpress stuff more and more lately because of pricing. They're like the new normal these days and gone are the days of super inferior stuff.
I have mounted the last one on a 980 Pro with a 3M 8810 thermal "pad" in a B550 ITX with a NH-C14S on the CPU and with the same test, the M.2 doesn't go over 60° C with about 21° C ambient.
Hi man, great video. Is that an aorus master z790 mobo right? So no way to fit JIUSHARK M.2 three on the main m.2 slot (the one near main GPU slot)? I would like to use it to cool a gen 5 nvme
Have you tested chipset coolers? I see tons of southbridge/northbridge coolers online I would like a fan based cooling for some extra temperature relief. However I have no clue what is good and what is lets say not good.
Using an M.2 cooling solution to cool a 13-series Intel CPU. Whodda thunk it? I guess without throttling it should handle what, a 13100, maybe a 13400? Props to the team for making that strong an M.2 cooler!
I think for the last one, they were relying on convection since the fins are oriented vertically how a mobo sits in case. But still I agree they are pointless silly things that give simple joy and satisfaction of some kind when you look at them on your mobo 😂
At this rate push-pull setups for your M.2s will become the norm.
or straight adding to your water cooling loop
Nein! Nein! Nein! Nein!
PCI-e 5.0 SSD is hitting 11W at sustained write operations. So , it is a possibility. But likely the M.2 connector has to go because M.2 specs requires 3.3V at 2A. We're hitting 3A on PCI-e 4.0 SSD these days.
@@TdrSld That's already a thing :D
Phase change or bust.
Bought the (similar) copper one some time ago. The cooling is actually impressive with just a little bit of airflow from a nearby case fan. Installed it on the rear M.2 slot on an ITX motherboard, result was a good 20 to 24 degrees drop. The difficulty is mounting space & positioning so it can benefit from some airflow inside the case.
Yea that’s exactly what I was thinking when he reviled the results of the last cooler. Seems to relies on air flow from either nearby case fan or gpu fans pulling air up.
3d printed shroud could easily boost performance forcing back(top fans for VRM too) fan to suck air close to the M.2
I have a pair of m.2 AI accelerators that output 28 watts each at full load so the tower cooler would actually be a good option
my first 80mm fan cooler was for an AMD duron that drew around 40 watts or something. A small little m.2 cooler this size would probably have done the job back then, given they came delidded. This looks quite promising for modern drives that keep increasing the power draw of the controller for more performance. Also wild to think that the controller on my drives is probably faster than that Duron as well xD, it was only like 750mhz or something and had way less cache xD
edit: im half delirious rn with a cold and a ton of benadryl in me, shold clarify im talking about the 2nd cooler that was shown off, not the ROG one lol.
May I ask? What's the software support for them? I have no experience with AI so I just wondered.
@@TheOriginalFaxon Another Duron gamer 💪 I remember swapping it out for an athlon 850 that ran at a cool 1ghz literally.. remember when cpu's actually fried themselves at 95c instead of it being normal boosting temps?
@@interlace84 Was just about to say, my teen years were full of lawn-mowing/landscaping summers, followed by PC component upgrades a few weeks before school started back up, lol, year in, year out. Spent I think 550 USD and bought the AMD Athlon 64 X2 (The worlds first consumer grade dual-core! What an absolute fucking disaster of a product line) Same story as Linus Sebastian on that one. What an expensive, EXPENSIVE mistake, especially being 14 years old and having to work a couple months to make that kind of money, lmao. I remember when simply running hot would kill CPUs.
@@flintfrommother3gaming basically all dedicated AI hardware requires you to convert a tensorflow/onnx/etc model to a hardware-specific variant and this is usually done with a proprietary software suite. I would like for more standardisation but the industry is still very young so it's hard to establish a more universal approach...
I'd like to see the copper one (JeYi) in a situation where it's using the down firing airflow from a GPU to provide additional cooling air (IE, its presumed intended use case.) I know the GPU will be providing warmer air, but it might be a fun surprise.
Hell, just in a standard case with and without a gpu would be a decent real-world test vs the bench
It's probably pronounced "Jay Yee". Yes, any forced convection airflow through the fin gaps should help a lot. They should have left the fin gaps open at the top to allow the air entry to the gaps from multiple angles.
got it today, my temps are from 48°C to 56°C using my mobo stock cooler (Aorus b550m pro-p) that tbh is just a crappy heat trap, I'll let you know how well the Jeyi works, just give me a few days
I cannot believe how good these videos are. All this cheap/alternator AliExpress stuff is absolutely amazing. Definitely keep it a trend please. Maybe delve into other thing?!
That M.2 Three cooler should make one hell of a good passive cooler, if it can fit without blocking other PCIe slots without the fan. I think GPU fans should provide more than enough airflow for any modern SSD with that kind of overkill heat sink.
I was thinking it looks great for a game server especially if you dont need a gpu in it.
that one lets me think if its ment for some kind Crypto mining useing m2 drives,i know there are cryptocoins that are beeing mined useing ssds already..
Would love to see a light airflow version of the testing for the coolers that are clearly banking on the system having some airflow. Especially that Jeyi copper one. That was the cooler I was looking at using before I decided to just go full diy and go for a copper heatsink and mount it myself. (I have not done this yet.)
Honestly loving that tiny cpu tower cooler
M.2 Tree would be decent even without the fan, wouldn't it? You could try the Jayi Q80 as well. It has parallel to the longer side fins, and you can maybe add a random 4cm fan to improve whatever performance it has.
Anyway, I think that any diy power led lamp enthusiast welcomes these small, but sometimes fair enough coolers. Of course I am talking about those solutions, which at least look like a usable heatsink.
Yeah, I wouldn't even use the fan on that, i'd just leave it passive. No matter the orientation it'll get great airflow in a case.
Would be nice to see at least 1-2 cooler tests done in a normal enclosed tower(w gpu) to see 'real world' performance temps, then emulate the rest of the coolers numbers in chart. Thanks for the comparisons and sacrifices :D What is the wait time of aliexpress products?
That m.2 tower cooler is better than some cpu cooler used in prebulid😂
In all fairness: Any part that actually functions at its intended job will outperform most prebuilt component counterparts.
JEYI makes also makes the "Snowpard M.2 cooler" which is very strange as it contains a M.2 PCB riser card which flips the orientation of the SSD.
It also extends beyond the M.2 slot in both directions making it look like a motherboard mounted heatsink.
That would be interesting, having the m2 drive perpendicular to the motherboard seems almost logical if heat dissipation is becoming such an issue
Jiushark is the brand that made the JF13K 240mm topdown CPU cooler, they like humongous heatsinks everywhere.
It would be a nice thing to review as well.
That silver vertical stack with heat pipes and fan cooler was cute as a button.
It would probably work great on a Laptop CPU if anyone wanted to pull one out of a case and convert it into a desktop :P I don't know, maybe if you got gifted a laptop you didn't care much about and needed a backup PC or wanted to make some Frankenstein home media pc or lightweight gaming rig for the living room, etc.
It would work better on AMD'S 65W desktop processors. No idea how you'd get it to stay attached. Lol
This M.2 cooler video series, reminds me of the attempts to cool North and South bridge chipsets. Especially remember the ones that were "designed" for use with SLI and crossfire uses. 🤣
Yep I had an XFX 780 Tri Sli board, the chipset heatsink had a fan on it that rotated near 6000rpm, was awful
"Smallest CPU tower cooler" wait till he finds out about the Ice Tower coolers for Raspberry Pi, they're straight up cute!
Most of these cooler, specially the finned and tower-style ones will greatly benefit from O11 Type cases where air intake is usually on the bottom. At that point only clearance is probably an issue.
Fractal Torrent let’s gooo
Who remembers the Thermalright HR-05 northbridge chipset tower cooler ? 2007 era, single heatpipe , about the same size as this M.2 THREE unit.
Great little ripper, I still own it.
Yeah, Jeyi looks like it would get a big boost from the GPU intake fan with that tall fin stack. Gelid would be fine on a storage M.2 for looks, is my thoughts on it. As for the huge tower, you could put a pair of them into one of the MSI boards with the double SSDs in a row, to benefit also from bottom case fans maybe. But a bit overkill. Great review, as always. Also, I agree, the Jeyi was a gorgeous cooler, that polished copper and matte black was a piece of art.
One thing i see about each pc build is that hot air from gpu gets recycled back into fan intake and fins, so best it would be to have the shroud connected to a duct at the back or front without leaks.
I would like to see the JIUSHARK M.2 three tested without a fan!
The tower cooler could cool my 3700X just fine. It's a 65W CPU.
Your 3700X is drawing over that quite often. It has a 65W TDP, but modern CPUs will exceed that TDP rating under load so long as there is thermal headroom. But yes, your CPU could run at TDP on that M.2 cooler.
That M.2 Cooler with the heatsink fan is crazy lol...
jeyi is actually quite famous and is the go to brand for ssd conversion kits(msata, mpcie, m2 b/m, sata, ultrabay)
For the last cooler, oriented in a vertical way, the heat rise will create an airflow
The finnscold heatsink looks pretty sick, and I think they're thinking that if you put it right next to the GPU it might take advantage of intake airflow to the GPU.
You're also missing a newline at the end of each Timestamp chapter thingy
Love the CPU cooling part with the m.2 cooler. I figured you'd do something like that when I saw the thumbnail. I got a kick out of the video.
Absolutely love these m.2 cooler roundups. Some are questionable, others are high performance beasts.
In the next test benchmark it would be nice to see the M.2 Three performance without the fan in open bench vs closed real case. As it would be appealing to use it without the fan if the performance would be there with regular case airflow.
jonsbo has M.2-3 a low profile heatsink with diagonal wedges for good compatibility of airflows and decent metal mass for burst workloads, for double-side ssd and also comes with phase change heat pad.
I have two JEYI RGB Coolers on my SSDs. They don’t have the fine copper fins but more coarser Aluminum fins and some RGB on top. Very well made and the SSDs max out at around 50C.
Sometimes I think the failure of the cheap heat sink comes from the low-grade thermal transfer sticky pads they come with that may be simple foam tape. The heat is just not getting to the heat sinks proper. The tests should be tried with known-quality thermal pads too. I had a similar issue with cheap thermal paste. The good stuff made a huge difference.
The M.2-Three would probably work really well with a GPU fan in close proximity to it. You wouldn't even need to install the fan that shipped with it.
My personal thought was always "is it possible to add a cooler to a laptop?"
My original idea was "why not move the entire finstack to the back of the laptop and make that part of the chasis of the laptop very open?". That way any cooling pad or even any air movement thru there would be much better than the restrictive finstacks with small fans that we have in laptops today.
Then I thought you could even add a USB fan (or more like a few in line) and use it as a "tilting of the laptop" and extra airflow.
I think the MSI Titan does this to an extent.
Maybe surface area ain't enough?
The M.2 Three intrigues me. I would like to see it tested on a lower end CPU, like a Ryzen R5 7600, 5600, 5500, 3600 (all 65 W TDP) and see how well it cools them. The small size could work in an SFF or ITX build and if it works Ok on this sort of 6 C 12T CPU, it should be 'fine'. I would suggest zip ties to affix it.
The tower cooler is the one I most liked. Your use of it on the CPU is what sold me. TBH there are low profile coolers about the same size that would cool about as well. I prefer to use some of these when I can. If the intel stock cooler was beefed up a bit with more mass and/or fins they could be quite a reasonable design. I have an old one from Arctic Cooling that is a basic 'starfish' design that keeps my Ryzen 3600 under 80C all the time. I also use an even older AM3 design from them that keeps things nice under my load scenarios. It just depends on the case to be used.
GELID made great budget coolers back then. I remember running the Tranquillo on my 2500K back then, it was giant and 4.5Ghz daily was no problem, it was like 30 bucks. Then later on the Phatom Black dual tower cooler also great and was like 40 bucks.
6:45 I bet lapping the CPU and the cooler could even more improve the cooling performance!
The M.2 three cooler would probably have been a good candidate to use as a passive drive cooler.
a long time ago, I used to use a Thermalright HR-05 passively for my northbridge chipset. It stuck off the board so far, it reminded me of this one.
Hahahaha the cut to using the SSD cooler on the CPU. Absolute mad lad.
Just saw another Jiushark product on LTT channel. It is a CPU cooler with a flat profile with some decent cooling performance for the price. That company looks legit.
The RGB cooler remind me of a case Jay stumbled accross when troubleshooting a viewer PC. Long story short : The RGB on the SSD (2.5" one) was outputing so much heat that the disk would just overheat and stop working
So even if the heatsink work, covering it with RGB doesn't seems that smart
The cpu cooler one is awesome and would be great for those new gen5 ssds, even in a passive setup i imagine.
They just dropped a much more reasonably sized new version, worse cooling ofc but that isn't saying much seeing how overkill this version is.
I heard Derbauer knows a guy that knows a guy that makes thermal pads.
I think the last one would benefit from a normal use case. I think the fin are oriented in that way because above there is the gpu fan pulling air between the fin. Not much because there is large gap between the gpu and the m.2 but i think it would perform better.
The Acidalie m.2 cooler is meant to perform well and looks well designed. The Sabrent Rocket m.2 cooler also tends to rate well.
I remember having Northbridge cooler like this back in the day... innovation never change 😂😂
Even if they are not throttling with no cooling it will increase the longevity of your drive. Heat is bad for SSDs. This is brilliant
I love the way you go out of your way to buy the worst crap available and test it with a seriousness it in no way deserves. Better than retro-encabulators ;)
The M.2-Three (23) should include the Air Jordan logo since it's GOATed.
I think you need to reconsider some parts of your testing when it comes to these SSD coolers, the JeYi cooler looked like it would work a lot better if the mainboard was vertical, to aid convection airflow. I don't know how well that would apply to the other ones but that one seemed like it would benefit the most from a different orientation.
The JEYI cooler would perform well I think ... motherboard is mostly vertical mounted, so the dissipation of heat would be a lot better then horizontal mounted, I think ...
And I agree, it got the best looks !
Excellent video! but I really wanted to see the curve of that mini-tower mounted on the SSD without the mini-fan
The Jeyi stuff is pretty good, I had a half height quad nvme card by them in my old X299 rig and it worked a treat
youtube timeline is broken on part 2(all after intro is 1 big part)
Only a 2 heat pipe cooler with an 8cm fan haven for ~130-135W Xeon E5-1620 v1 in a Lenovo S30 by factory.
At CPU full load is not silent, but solve the job without throttling.
But that true of course, much EZr cooling down a 22nm chip.
wish you'd tried the tower m.2 cooer without the fan installed, that would stop it from blocking the slots next to it and it might still work really well
Jeyi Finscold Q150 really cool, but have got design flows. Aluminum base and Copper fins aren't properly connected. I think after Gill Boyd video JEYI fixed a bit construction, but not sure. I think they just should invert construction - let copper fins touch thermal pad on SSD and aluminum base just close "sandwich".
The big problem with using the top M2 slot is the SSD absorbs tons of GPU heat while gaming. Shouldn't be a big deal as you aren't doing an extended read/write, but it is noticeable.
I have that Gelid radiator, using it on my 970 Evo plus 1Tb. I'm getting a reduction of about 15 degreees Celsius with it, I'm fine with that, considering the fact it was 1$ during a sale, can't really complain for that price.
that is why the aluminium plate is removeable, take it out for double sided leave it in for single sided and it goes on the bottom
The changed logo font protects the manufacturer from lawsuits from ASUS =)
Fun content! It would've been nice to see them in a closed case with some air flow, as pointed out in the video
i got a copper one with fins oriented facing the front intake fans and it has a small fan in front and blows air in between the copper fins to the back... gives decent cooling to my m.2 gen4
It would have been also interesting if you tested the M.2 Thee without the fan, so you could see the difference between that and the Finscold cooler.
Please test JF13K 😊
That tower cooler would no doubt perform much better with a slightly larger fan that got some airflow over the pipes, and a clamping mechanism. Seriously considering it for my Mini-STX with x8 GT710 and NVMe to PCIe adapter. Still looking for something like a standard tower case but very smol to put it in.
Surely the obvious thing to try with the mini CPU cooler was taking the fan off?
I haver a full copper heatsink, it's a simple checkered square design, works well, but haven't done any comparisions as of yet
awesome video , are you going to try using the sticking copper heatsinks to only cool the controller ?
Great job Roman, now I have to clean coffe from my laptop as I was laughing out loud :D
If active cooling of M.2 drives is going to become necessary they surely need to come up with some sort of better and more universal solution. I never really liked seeing M.2 become a port on motherboards, just seems like a real clunky solution when PC cases have so much free space for drives that could be better utilised. Mounting drives in cooled bays makes a lot more sense than mounting them to motherboards where space is always at a premium, especially if they're going to need active cooling.
I don't understand how they expect these coolers to fit when GPUs sits right on top of the M.2 slot... very few motherboards actually have an M.2 slot ABOVE the GPU. But even then, the remaining M.2 slots are below the PCIe/GPU slot
Can’t wait to see an Asetek AIO solution for M.2 SSDs.
Im likeing the Acidalie M.2 SSD heatsink with Double Layer Aluminum and 4 Copper Heat Pipes Cooler for M.2 SSD
right now.
This is the definitive deep dive into the ultimate M.2 coolers. Definitive what I'm just not sure yet, but nonetheless can't wait for the final installment. 👍🏻👍🏻
I'm pretty curious to see the Jiushark with out a fan. It could be decent to have it near a gpu fan
This is what Der Bauer listening to his intrusive thoughts looks like
Please test the Acidalie M.2 Heatsink. It’s usually regarded as one of the better, and cheaper, passive M.2 heatsinks.
Ha, didn't expect to see that M.2 cooler hooked up to the CPU, kind of impressive performance too, all things considered.
There's a nice one by Icybox, that you should review. It uses a 30mm fan and dual copper heat pipes. I have one, it works reducing max temperatures by about 20 degree C, on a Sabrent Rocket plus 1tb.
NGL I'm gravitating towards Aliexpress stuff more and more lately because of pricing. They're like the new normal these days and gone are the days of super inferior stuff.
I had no idea people ACTUALLY buy things like this. There is definitely a decent selection of motherboards that come with M.2 heatsinks these days.
you should retest that last one with a fan blowing through it. Then compare it with the best one with again a fan blowing on it.
Happy Easter (bunny) to your cats!
we need more m.2 coolers testing
To be fair - you did crack the housing by the fan so maybe that is why it is making noises ??
I have mounted the last one on a 980 Pro with a 3M 8810 thermal "pad" in a B550 ITX with a NH-C14S on the CPU and with the same test, the M.2 doesn't go over 60° C with about 21° C ambient.
the last one you tested is supposed to work with the fans on the gpu, as you place that m.2 right uncer the gpu
I love gadgets like this, but still... "large quantity of metal draws heat. News at 11."
Hi man, great video. Is that an aorus master z790 mobo right? So no way to fit JIUSHARK M.2 three on the main m.2 slot (the one near main GPU slot)? I would like to use it to cool a gen 5 nvme
New version was just announced, much smaller and more elegant.
Have you tested chipset coolers? I see tons of southbridge/northbridge coolers online I would like a fan based cooling for some extra temperature relief. However I have no clue what is good and what is lets say not good.
I love the look of that copper one
Using an M.2 cooling solution to cool a 13-series Intel CPU. Whodda thunk it? I guess without throttling it should handle what, a 13100, maybe a 13400? Props to the team for making that strong an M.2 cooler!
That thing could absolutely be used as a normal cooler for 12100f. I would like to see a short video testing that.
I think for the last one, they were relying on convection since the fins are oriented vertically how a mobo sits in case.
But still I agree they are pointless silly things that give simple joy and satisfaction of some kind when you look at them on your mobo 😂
They are counting on a GPU being right on top sucking in air from that area.
Did the big cpu-style any other mobo thermals simultaneously? That would be interesting as they often over or under the GPU ect!
Master, take a look at the barrow and barrowch m.2 coolers. The barrowch has even a version with an oled thermal monitor!
It would be funny to compare the M.2 Three or even use it alongside with another cheap tower cooler like the Deep Cool Ice Edge Mini FS 2.0
At 70W this cooler handle 7800x3D without a sweat. Nice video