I would say not very useful. Speed is not important, temperature is. What good is high speed if it's going to burn like a stove and break down quickly?
Hello, the enclosure keeps the ssd below dangerous temperatures if you install it properly. If the enclosure is hot, this means it’s doing its job. You should be worried if it’s cold and at the same time ssd reporting very high temperatures. Also, no matter where you install it, an NVMe SSD will get hot under high usage. That’s in its job description. Adata Legend 800 has its operating temperatures between 0 and 70 degrees Celsius. I am using my ssd with enclosure and writing on it almost daily (video editing). No problems with the temperature.
Ah, I almost forgot one important thing: the SSD’s high temperature (from the data sheet) is reached when hitting continuously its maximum speed. With this enclosure, it will never ever hit those temperatures. 10gbps (1250 MB/s) is it’s speed limit.
@@zubilitic I don't need the case, I was interested in mounting the motherboard itself, where there is a radiator added by the manufacturer of the motherboard. The reason for the temperature discrepancy I would say is more of a misreading and just needs to be calibrated. A high temperature is anything but a good thing. It shortens the life of the SSD drastically as well as overclocking the CPU. Someone somewhere had provided a chart that nicely showed how high write temperatures drastically reduced the number of cycles you could write the blocks before they failed.
Hello, the video is about this M2 ssd in an enclosure, not in a PC where you have more room and ways to keep the SSD cool which is more important because you can reach it's maximum speeds if the slot permits it. And with an enclosure it doesn't get dangerously hot because of the reasons mentioned in my previous comment. Obviously, it's not ideal but sometimes you need to use it with an enclosure and accept the downsides. Cheers.
I have been researching a lot on this kind of setup. Ultimately the enclosure is the limiting factor here. Thank you so much for explaining this.
Hello, no problem, glad it helped. Thanks for your feedback and visit.
I would say not very useful. Speed is not important, temperature is. What good is high speed if it's going to burn like a stove and break down quickly?
Hello, the enclosure keeps the ssd below dangerous temperatures if you install it properly. If the enclosure is hot, this means it’s doing its job. You should be worried if it’s cold and at the same time ssd reporting very high temperatures.
Also, no matter where you install it, an NVMe SSD will get hot under high usage. That’s in its job description.
Adata Legend 800 has its operating temperatures between 0 and 70 degrees Celsius.
I am using my ssd with enclosure and writing on it almost daily (video editing). No problems with the temperature.
Ah, I almost forgot one important thing: the SSD’s high temperature (from the data sheet) is reached when hitting continuously its maximum speed. With this enclosure, it will never ever hit those temperatures. 10gbps (1250 MB/s) is it’s speed limit.
@@zubilitic I don't need the case, I was interested in mounting the motherboard itself, where there is a radiator added by the manufacturer of the motherboard. The reason for the temperature discrepancy I would say is more of a misreading and just needs to be calibrated. A high temperature is anything but a good thing. It shortens the life of the SSD drastically as well as overclocking the CPU. Someone somewhere had provided a chart that nicely showed how high write temperatures drastically reduced the number of cycles you could write the blocks before they failed.
Hello, the video is about this M2 ssd in an enclosure, not in a PC where you have more room and ways to keep the SSD cool which is more important because you can reach it's maximum speeds if the slot permits it.
And with an enclosure it doesn't get dangerously hot because of the reasons mentioned in my previous comment.
Obviously, it's not ideal but sometimes you need to use it with an enclosure and accept the downsides.
Cheers.