Tuesday, May 30th 2023

Team Group Shows Off Gen 5 NVMe SSD with AIO Cooling, and T-Force Z5 Gen 5 SSDs

A trend we've seen in the 2023 Computex is that SSD manufacturers aren't advertising their feisty Gen 5 NVMe SSDs with the elaborate cooling solutions that they sorely need, but rather as bare drives, with the cooling options marketed separately. In practice, manufacturers could get retailers to bundle Gen 5 SSDs with a selection of their coolers. This lets them trim some of the criticism of just how hot SSDs have gotten over just one generation. Team Group showed off its T-Force Cardea Z5 lines of M.2 Gen 5 NVMe SSDs. There are two distinct lines with the same names. One of these comes with a maximum sequential read speed of 12 GB/s, while the other comes with 14 GB/s. Both have their respective 1 TB, 2 TB, and 4 TB capacity variants. Both use 3D TLC NAND flash. The under-the-hood difference between the 12 GB/s and 14 GB/s versions of the Cardea Z5 is that while the 12 GB/s variant uses a Phison E26-series controller, the 14 GB/s one uses an InnoGrit IG5666 controller. Team Group intends to eventually re-brand the 14 GB/s variant as the Cardea Z54A series.

Team Group also announced a handful cooling solutions to pair with these Gen 5 SSDs. The most striking of these is the T-Force Siren, an all-in-one (AIO) closed loop liquid M.2 NVMe SSD cooler, with as 120 mm radiator. The name is a bit of a misnomer, as SSD coolers with 20 mm fans is what a siren might sound like. Obviously, this cooler is overkill, and helps the SSD deliver its best performance, but there are other options from the company. The T-Force AirFlow I uses two copper heatpipes that run through the base-plate, pulling heat from the controller, NAND flash, and DRAM, and pushing it through an aluminium fin-stack arranged vertically. This is then ventilated by a 30 mm fan. The T-Force Airflow II uses a slightly different approach, with a single thicker heat pipe arranged in a C-shape, with radially-projecting finnage that have the appearance of a cylinder. At the other end of this is a 30 mm fan.
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9 Comments on Team Group Shows Off Gen 5 NVMe SSD with AIO Cooling, and T-Force Z5 Gen 5 SSDs

#1
TheDeeGee
Wild, but thankfully Gen5 isn't needed for gaming the coming 10 years.
Posted on Reply
#3
Awwwyeahhhbaby
I'd never buy a GPU or NVME with an AIO, eventually it will fail and then you're kinda outta luck.
Posted on Reply
#4
kawice
No one is questioning stupid NVMe M2 drives design where device that takes 10W - 15 Watts of total power heat ups to 110C degree. We make water cooling AIO for that - 2023 year engineers. :rolleyes:
Posted on Reply
#6
Gmr_Chick
Jesus, no wonder pc cases are getting huge - you gotta use an AIO for your CPU, you have to use one for your monstrous GPU, and now you have to use one for your SSD? Radiators! Radiators everywhere! :fear: :kookoo:
Posted on Reply
#7
Chris_Ramseyer
Phison Rep
HairyLobstersM.2 Gen5 drives were a mistake.
People said that about Gen4 when it was first released. Eventually you will buy a Gen5 SSD and love it.

Maybe the new Phison E31T low power drive is more your speed. 10GB/s, low cost, mainstream drive, low power.
Posted on Reply
#8
kawice
NMVe M.2 Gen5 coolers. :peace:
Seriously there is something wrong with NVMe M.2 drives design.



Posted on Reply
#9
HairyLobsters
Chris_RamseyerPeople said that about Gen4 when it was first released. Eventually you will buy a Gen5 SSD and love it.

Maybe the new Phison E31T low power drive is more your speed. 10GB/s, low cost, mainstream drive, low power.
I was referring to how large of a cooler is required to control heat. A different form factor would have been better.
Posted on Reply
Dec 24th, 2024 14:27 EST change timezone

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