Team Group’s T-Force Cardea Liquid: A Liquid-Cooled M.2 SSD
by Anton Shilov on July 26, 2019 1:00 PM EST- Posted in
- SSDs
- Storage
- M.2
- 3D TLC
- Team Group
- PS5012-E12
- T-Force Cardea Liquid
With liquid cooling options already available for most PC components, it was only a matter of time until someone did it for PC storage as well. And now that point has come, thanks to Team Group and its T-Force Cardea Liquid M.2 PCIe Gaming SSD.
True to its name, the T-Force Cardea Liquid M.2 PCIe Gaming SSD is an M.2 SSD relying on water cooling to keep its temperature in check. And while it's not a looped cooling device – despite using liquid cooling, it's still a stand-alone, closed device that doesn't get plugged in to an open loop system – it's none the less a novel step in developing more exotic SSD cooling systems. Using their liquid cooling module, Team Group says that their cooling system will reduce temperature of the drive by 10ºC when compared to a SSD without a heat sink.
The cooling system of the T-Force Cardea Liquid is relatively simple. The liquid cooling module relies on the self-circulation effect by separating the water block into two chambers. When the coolant in the chamber above the controller/memory gets hot, it flows to the second chamber to cool down. Essentially, the aluminum water block acts like a vapor chamber, but uses a mainstream coolant instead of a specialized low boiling point liquid. This kind of cooler is cheap to make, and since it is shipped without any water inside (it's designed to be filled by the end user), there is no risk of leakage during shipping. Because it's still a closed cooling system, the SSD and its cooling module still requires a good airflow inside the PC case to pull heat away and out of the system, but using a liquid to cool down a high-end SSD is certainly an innovative method.
Set to be available in 256 GB, 512 GB, and 1 TB versions, the T-Force Cardea Liquid is compatible with any desktop PC featuring an M.2-2280 slot supporting a PCIe 3.0 x4 interface. With that said, the the drive is far taller than normal SSDs at 14.1 mm high, so one has to make sure there is enough space around it to fit.
The liquid-cooled SSD from Team Group is based on Phison's PS5012-E12 controller as well as 3D TLC NAND from an undisclosed manufacturer. When it comes to performance, the top-of-the-range 1 TB model of the T-Force Cardea Liquid will offer up to 3400 MB/s sequential read speed, up to 3000 MB/s sequential write speed (when pSLC caching works), up to 450K IOPS random read speed, and up to 400K IOPS random write speed. Since this is a consumer SSD, we are talking about peak numbers here.
Team Group T-Force Cardea Liquid M.2 PCIe SSD Specifications | |||
Capacity | 256 GB | 512 GB | 1 TB |
Model Number | TM8FP5256G0C119 | TM8FP5512G0C119 | TM8FP5001T0C119 |
Controller | Phison PS5012-E12 | ||
NAND Flash | 3D TLC NAND | ||
Form-Factor, Interface | M.2-2280, PCIe 3.0 x4, NVMe 1.3 | ||
Sequential Read | 3000 MB/s | 3400 MB/s | |
Sequential Write | 1000 MB/s | 2000 MB/s | 3000 MB/s |
Random Read IOPS | 200K IOPS | 350K IOPS | 450K IOPS |
Random Write IOPS | 200K IOPS | 300K IOPS | 400K IOPS |
Pseudo-SLC Caching | Supported | ||
DRAM Buffer | ? | ||
TCG Opal Encryption | No | ||
Power Management | ? | ||
Warranty | 3 years | ||
MTBF | 2,000,000 hours | ||
TBW | >380 TB | >800 TB | >1665 TB |
Additional Information | Link | ||
MSRP | ? | $100.99 | $169.99 |
Team Group will start selling its T-Force Cardea Liquid drives in the near future. Pricing is something that remains to be seen, but keep in mind that this is a high-end SSD family.
Related Reading:
- Alphacool Releases Two New SSD Coolers: Passive HDX-2 and Watercooled HDX-3
- The Team Group MP34 512GB SSD Review: Refining Phison's NVMe Workhorse
- ADATA Announces XPG Storm: A Cooler for M.2 SSDs with a 16500 RPM Fan
- CES 2019: TeamGroup And ASRock Release Phantom Gaming Branded Memory and SSD
- EKWB Launches Aftermarket EK-M.2 Aluminum Heatsink for M.2 SSDs
Source: Team Group
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The Chill Blueberry - Friday, July 26, 2019 - link
Lolsleepeeg3 - Friday, July 26, 2019 - link
LOL! I came here to post that, too.sleepeeg3 - Friday, July 26, 2019 - link
Also, not sure how water in a plastic box is supposed to help dissipate heat, despite the magic marketing arrows...deil - Monday, July 29, 2019 - link
It just hogs the heat, by big thermal capacity. I bet major test suite would boil it.good at making temps steady, but I doublt any good on dissipation
Lord of the Bored - Saturday, July 27, 2019 - link
ROFLMAO!Me three.
rrinker - Friday, July 26, 2019 - link
And this complexity is buying us what exactly? Just something cool to look at? This seems about as useful as festooning the SSD with RGB LEDs.Just because you can, doesn't mean you should. Yes, I'm old, and I'm also an engineer - show me a real world benefit of this over a traditional heat sink on the module. It seems just as big if not bigger than other existing solution AND still relies on adequate air circulation within the case (and often right down between the PCI slots which seems to be where most MBs are locating their M.2 slots these days).
DanNeely - Friday, July 26, 2019 - link
Marketing has decided that gamers and their money are as easily separable by tacky bling as audiophools and their money are by nonsense audio quality claims.Sivar - Friday, July 26, 2019 - link
@DanNeely, not _that_ easily. Audiophiles will literally purchase multi-thousand dollar brass "resonating cones" and similarly expensive beeswax fuses to improve their measurably awful vacuum tube/vinyl record systems.At least water cooling an SSD keeps heat out of the chassis and, perhaps in pathological situations, can prevent SSD performance throttling due to an overheating controller. Both are nearly useless, but only nearly.
Arbie - Friday, July 26, 2019 - link
This water cooler doesn't even keep heat (such as it is) out of the chassis. It just moves it a little more efficiently from the SSD chips to the chassis environment.Flunk - Monday, July 29, 2019 - link
Don't forget the $1000 8-foot HDMI cables.