TeamGroup already had All-in-One liquid CPU coolers that took advantage of the circuitry to also dissipate heat from the more powerful M.2 NVMe 2.0 drives. However, in this Computex they have gone a step further, and after showing us their SSDs with heatsinks with active ventilation, they have also shown an independent liquid cooling system designed exclusively to cool an M.2 SSD.
The NVMe 2.0 SSD with PCI Express 5.0 interface high performance (exceeding 12,000 MB/s of sequential reading and more than 1.5 million random access IOPS) in these first generations have quite high cooling needs in their memories and controllers, but without a doubt, having a liquid cooling with its own block, pump and radiator for an SSD was something that we did not imagine.
Under the name of T-Force Siren GD120S AiO ARGB we find a full AiO liquid cooling, with a 136mm radiator with a matching 120mm fan, and two mesh tubes that carry the liquid coolant to a closed block that is placed on the SSD and the heat is extracted by means of a copper base compatible with M.2 2280 size SSD (22 x 80 mm).
TeamGorup promises to maintain sustained write operations of up to 12 GB/s on NVMe 2.0 PCIe Gen 5.0 SSDs using this system.
It does not lack an RGB lighting system on the fan, which is capable of rotating up to 2,200 RPM of maximum speed, at which time it generates just under 40 dbA. At the moment there are no details about its price or launch in our country.
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Anthony Delgado
Computer Engineer by training, writer and hardware analyst at Geeknetic since 2011. I love gutting everything that comes my way, especially the latest hardware that we receive here for reviews. In my free time I mess around with 3d printers, drones and other gadgets. For anything here you have me.