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suhuxa12017-08-06 08:34:07
Iron
suhuxa1, 2017-08-06 08:34:07

Is it true that ssd m.2 PCI-E formats get very hot at maximum speed?

There is no ssd on the laptop, the work slows down a lot. phpstorm, photoshop, illustrator, virtual OS running in parallel, and so on. It costs windows 10. The brakes are big. Despite the fact that the core i7 is 6800, and the RAM is 16GB. The only thing missing is ssd. So I decided to buy a small one, say for 256g. The choice fell on the Samsung for 6800. The most common, with the declared speeds of 540MB \ 520MB read / write. But then I saw for 10k CORSAIR MP500 speeds which are 6 times higher. I don't play, and I don't seem to need this, but if there is a choice to give 7k or 10k, but get a 6 times faster thing, I will choose the second. But I read from gamers that this board heats up to 100 degrees !!! What can be fatal for the motherboard. I would like to ask those who know, do such boards really warm up like that? Even if it's not about games? So it will come out

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Moskus, 2017-08-06
@Moskus

Before you blindly upgrade, you need to reliably determine what is the weak point. To do this, you need to arm yourself with, for example, Process Explorer , run it, work a little, then look at the graphs in it. It can easily turn out, for example, that the disk subsystem has absolutely nothing to do with it, but the problem is the lack of RAM (16 GB can very easily turn out to be small if heavy projects are open in the same Illustrator and Photoshop or they are not properly limited memory usage). In this case, the SSD will speed up the work only because the swap file, where everything that does not fit into RAM falls out, will be read faster, but this will certainly be the wrong solution to the problem. If I were you, I would increase the amount of RAM and not spend money on an SSD.

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