Silicon Power P34A80 1 TB Review - TLC at 13 Cents per GB 18

Silicon Power P34A80 1 TB Review - TLC at 13 Cents per GB

Windows 10 Startup & File Compression »

Thermal Throttling

Due to the compact form factor, M.2 drives lack the ability to cool themselves and usually have to rely on passive airflow instead. All vendors include some form of thermal throttling on their drives as a safeguard, which limits throughput once a certain temperature is exceeded.

On this page, we will investigate whether the tested drive has such a mechanism, how high temperatures get, and what effect this has on performance. We will test the drive in a typical case and the M.2 slot between the CPU and VGA card. A second data point shows the result with a 120 mm fan directly blowing on the tested drive. Each of the charts has time moving from left to right, with the blue line displaying transfer speed in MB/s and the red line showing the temperature in °C (measured using SMART).

Reads

Temperature Test Read
Temperature Test Read with Fan

In a pure read scenario, the drive doesn't throttle at all.

Writes

Temperature Test Write
Temperature Test Write with Fan

When heavily loaded with writes, the drive encounters two stages of thermal throttling. The first is very well behaved and kicks in at 70°C. Write speed gets cut in half, to around 1.3 GB/s, which is good. Since temperature still increases, write speeds are throttled further once the drive reaches 74°C—150 MB/s in that state is slower than most other SSDs we've tested.

Thermal Limits

The tests above represent a worst-case scenario for the SSD since we're running it at maximum speed for an extended period of time. Beyond that, it becomes important to look at how storage performs when under lighter load, which is the case with many consumer applications. For this test, we're sending a fixed-rate stream of data to the drive until temperatures have stabilized. As long as there is no thermal throttling, we'll increase the data rate and chart it below.

Sustained Write Thermal Limits


Maximum Speed before Overheating


Thermal Image & Hot Spot

Thermal Camera FLIR Image during Write Test

We recorded a thermal image of the running SSD as it was completing the write test. The hottest part reached 85°C, while the drive's own thermal reporting claimed temperatures of 75°C—should be alright.
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Jun 28th, 2024 04:56 EDT change timezone

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