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EK Announces New Lineup of M.2 SSD Heatsinks

btarunr

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EK Water Blocks, the Slovenia-based premium PC liquid cooling gear manufacturer, launched its first heatsinks for M.2 NVMe SSDs five years ago. Since then, EK has sold over one hundred thousand of those units and gained a reputation for producing efficient passive cooling solutions for M.2 SSDs. This reputation led to collaborations with leading storage manufacturers, the latest being Seagate, and the development of a heatsink for FireCuda 530 SSD, which found its home in many gaming PCs and even PlayStation 5 consoles.

With SSDs having no intention of getting slower, only faster, the need for SSD cooling solutions will only grow, and EK has prepared a new heatsink, the EK-Quantum Convection M.2 NVMe, as part of the Quantum product line. The redesign didn't only bring aesthetic changes but also one very important functional update. As M.2 SSDs are getting faster, they are also gaining on capacity and using a double-sided layout. And that is where the EK-Quantum Convection M.2 NVMe has the upper hand.



EK-Quantum Convection M.2 NVMe
The EK-Quantum Convection M.2 NVMe is a passive aluminium heatsink for M.2 NVMe solid state drives. Although it's not a water cooling component, it is a much-needed aesthetic and cooling solution for many PC owners. It's no secret that M.2 NVMe SSDs can quickly overheat and be subdued to thermal throttling, thus losing performance. However, the new heatsink from EK will completely prevent thermal throttling in cases with sufficient airflow or otherwise significantly prolong the time before thermal throttling of the SSD occurs.

It is simple to install, low profile, easily reusable, and aesthetically non-intrusive. The heatsink uses a clever design where flipping the backplate will realign the mounting holes on the backplate to another set of screw holes on the heatsink. This will move the backplate away from the main body of the heatsink, allowing for more space and installation on double-sided SSDs.

It is built from high-grade aluminium and is available in four distinctive finishes. With its unique Quantum-like design, this heatsink will be the perfect addition to your build. The four available finishes - gold, black, nickel, and silver - will perfectly match other EK Quantum line products like Torque fittings, pump covers, backplates, etc.

Compatibility
The EK-Quantum Convection M.2 NVMe is compatible with all single- and double-sided 2280 M.2 NVMe SSDs (22 mm wide, 80 mm long). Because the heatsink consists of a front piece and backplate, the compatibility is limited to M.2 (NGFF) connectors with 4.2 mm in height.

What Is a Single and What Is a Double-Sided M.2 SSD?
Single-sided M.2 NVMe SSDs only have chips on one side of the PCB. This means all the storage and controller electronics are placed on one side of the drive, hence the name, single-sided. These drives are smaller and generate less heat. Double-sided M.2 NVMe drives have chips on both sides of the PCB. These drives usually offer more storage capacity by adding flash memory storage chips on both sides of the drive.

Availability and Pricing
These premium M.2 NVMe solid state drive heatsinks are made in Slovenia, Europe, and are now available for purchase through EK Webshop and partner reseller network. The table below shows the manufacturer's suggested retail price (MSRP), VAT included.



View at TechPowerUp Main Site
 
Interesting.... technically speaking it can be modded into a waterblock. Maybe not a very good one, but possible.... Some clear acrylic with holes drilled for small barbs and some epoxy or silicon sealant/gasket maker/seam sealer.


Not saying its a good idea. But it will work.
 
Design based off pin ball?? ;)
 
Gotta prepared for those shiny PCIe Gen 5 SSD eh :laugh:
 
This design doesn't make any sense performance wise: these ssds just draw 10w at max, you really don't need all that mass to handle peak power.
They should just have tons of fins to increase cooling surface.
 
3x the price of the "old" one, wonder how many °C improvement that translates to, 1 or 2 :wtf:
 
Wow, I like these, even though I am still using several of their older sinks, which worked extremely well and dropped my work rig's m.2 temps by about ~5-8c on avg :)

And oh man, that gold one is really sick looking, but why they gotta jack the price by $4, or did I miss the part about it being 24k gold-plated, hehehe :D
 
Their old ones were a lot better than these slabs of metal. Also it seems like Seagate's recent SSD with EK "heatsink" is also similar solid slab of metal being sold as "heatsink".
 
Hmm, without active cooling it looks more like a heat trap. I may just be feeling overly cynical today. -shrug-
I think I'd take one of freeagents thermalright monster sinks before one of these. Those, at least have heatpipes and properly built fins to do something with the heat. Much harder to hide of course but you know they will work with the weakest squirrel fart case fans out there hehehe.
 
The only thing that needs cooled on an SSD is the controller and NAND chips actually perform better when warm.
 
This design doesn't make any sense performance wise: these ssds just draw 10w at max, you really don't need all that mass to handle peak power.
They should just have tons of fins to increase cooling surface.
Pcie 5 drives are going to be HOT . Hence all the new heatsinks from every company
 
Shiny....I like it
 
So not water cooled then...
 
With only budget boards coming with no heatsinks this seems to be a waste. As an example my X570S board comes with thermal pads on both sides of the M2. That alone is enough to make the cost of the 530 with heatsink foolsih as you will not notice a difference in temps but get the exact same speeds and it makes more sense to save your money with something you don't need. Of course it being EK means that means a certain number of people will be influenced to think that these will somehow make their SSD super cool. I don't see any PCIe 5.0 drives not coming with a substantial heatsink but I guess EK can sell these to Brands too.
 
I click on every EK announcement just to get a laugh out of their nonsensical pricing... hasn't failed yet.
 
It does kind of remind me of one of those games that you you have to tilt the board to get the tiny steel balls into the holes.
 
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