Tuesday, June 25th 2024
Arctic Unveils the M2 Pro SSD Cooler
Small, fast, hot—M.2 SSDs. The compact power packs require additional cooling to ensure consistently high performance. ARCTIC offers the right solution with the M2 Pro. M.2 SSDs are true speed miracles. However, they tend to reach high temperatures quickly during intensive use and reduce performance early to avoid overheating. The M2 Pro was specifically designed for 2280 M.2 SSDs. Thanks to its additional mass, it not only keeps the temperature under control, but also ensures that the SSD can cool down more quickly. This enables reliable performance and a long service life. The cooler is extremely compact at 73 x 24.2 x 10.5 mm and comes with two precisely fitting ARCTIC TP-3 Premium Performance thermal pads.Also ideal for the PlayStation 5
If you want to give your PlayStation 5 a memory upgrade, Sony definitely recommends getting a suitable cooler. With the M2 Pro from ARCTIC, gamers are ideally equipped for SSD expansion of their PS5 or PS5 Slim.
Features
The new M2 Pro—available in Black and Silver—is now available on ARCTIC webshop, on eBay and Amazon, starting at a price of $ 5.49 (MSRP $ 9.99).
For more information, visit the product page.
If you want to give your PlayStation 5 a memory upgrade, Sony definitely recommends getting a suitable cooler. With the M2 Pro from ARCTIC, gamers are ideally equipped for SSD expansion of their PS5 or PS5 Slim.
Features
- For single-sided and double-sided 2280 M.2 SSDs
- Protects against overheating and loss of performance
- Easy construction
- TP-3 thermal pads included
- Compatible with Liquid Freezer III
The new M2 Pro—available in Black and Silver—is now available on ARCTIC webshop, on eBay and Amazon, starting at a price of $ 5.49 (MSRP $ 9.99).
For more information, visit the product page.
23 Comments on Arctic Unveils the M2 Pro SSD Cooler
Not to mention it's just a block of aluminium with no fins to radiate heat.
Although as a low profile heatsink for laptops and SFF machines. This might make all the difference if it fits.
This statement here does confuse me though... How does the SSD tie in to the AIO? Does the LF III have an additional addon that attaches to the SSD heatsink?
I can copy a 30 gig game from internal to M.2 in about 7 seconds, but the other way its about 40 seconds. I wonder if its to manage temps on the internal chips.
I got plans on one tall JEYI SSD Heatsink for my SSD, but after i carefully measured everything - i can't install it. One heatpipe of Noctua NH-D15 with NM-AMB12 will touch heatsink. I can tecnically grind off in this area, but maybe it's better to just get another product...
This is a $0.33 heatsink on AliExpress:
If your stylish garbage has less surface area that this, it's a worthless piece of shit.
www.arctic.de/en/TP-3/ACTPD00052A
Looks like they're kind of like putty.
These results are really great and not just for as a passive heatsink. Look at the results of the Thermalright HR-10 Pro that is a big heatsink plus a small 30mm fan which are comparable to this one
www.boringtextreviews.com/2023/12/14/beyond-overkill-cooling-jiushark-m-2-three-ssd-heatsink-review/ I see your fins and raise you... more fins!
Are we ridiculous enough now?
And reading is always faster than writing.
With slabs of metal like this one from Artic that just add a bit of thermal inertia to the drive that's how :D
It's a bit embarrassing for Artic to not have added some fins but it won't perform particularly different than most other ssd "coolers" on the market. If for some reason your ssd needs more cooling you made a bad purchasing decision with that ssd, if you're doing intensive reads and writes that make this not enough you're playing in a different market segment
Do we have a test where we can see how just adding a fan works vs just heatsink vs heatsink and fan?
www.techpowerup.com/review/team-group-siren-duo360-aio-liquid-cpu-ssd-cooler/ TPU kind of did that with this team group one. The thermal analysis page shows the heatsink working with and without the fan. Pretty much shows that the fan helps keep the cooler temp while without it, the temp increases almost as if no heatsink was there. Which is still a bit weird. Or maybe it happens because of the heatsink design.
edit: forgot to add the link
www.techpowerup.com/review/team-group-z540-2-tb/8.html
Not a huge deal though as the priority is fast reads on a game console. Was just an observation and still much faster than copying to USB HDD.
The M.2 is a SN850X with a built in heat sink.
Unfortunately this Arctic design looks like more form over function
EDIT: what @TheDeeGee said is spot on, I have an aliexpress one that has a similar mounting process and once the pads sink in the capacitors of the NVME, you are not getting this thing out.
The SSD heatsink's mission cooled down the controller and keep the controller's temperature between 40-70 degree Celcius.
If your SSD controller doesn't write over 70 degree Celcius, don't buy SSD heatsink.
You can google "SSD heatsink can kill your SSD" and see the result.