- Dec 21, 2017
- 478
I added a Western Digital SN720 OEM NVMe SSD to my ASUS TUF FX504 laptop and it is always operating at 55 C - 60 C degrees? Is it normal?
I am afraid it will burn or melt internal parts its soo hot. I overboosted fans! Lol ,What should I do?My SanDisk 128 GIG is running at 38 Celsius, according to its on sensor it rarely goes above this but I don't look often but this is a Desk PC, lappys often run hotter anyway do to being in confined area with limited cooling - Seems its within reason, especially in a laptop
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That means something is taking the IO in background. If disk usage is showing 0% in task manager > Disk section (NVMe drive), Then I think you need 2 layers of 1mm thermal pads or small heatsink such as Advancing Gene or similar to reduce those temps by 5-10C.I added a Western Digital SN720 OEM NVMe SSD to my ASUS TUF FX504 laptop and it is always operating at 55 C - 60 C degrees? Is it normal?
Is there anything TSkin settings in Ryzen Controller or Ryzen master? I think your SSD performance could be throttled due to nearby hot components which can trigger artificial throttling.Same issue on my Tuf F17, 2nd NVMe SSD is running at around 60°C, while preinstalled Samsung SSD is running at 35°C. In task manager 0% utilization on both disks. I think issue might be this component just above SSD generating heat (covered by copper HS) in this picture.
I added a Western Digital SN720 OEM NVMe SSD to my ASUS TUF FX504 laptop and it is always operating at 55 C - 60 C degrees? Is it normal?
No Ryzen, this one has i5-11400H. I have no performance issues.Is there anything TSkin settings in Ryzen Controller or Ryzen master? I think your SSD performance could be throttled due to nearby hot components which can trigger artificial throttling.