Your SSD is thermal throttling and you never notice
Let's say you've paid for a Gen5 SSD that promises 14,000 megabytes per second, but during a large Steam download or a 4K video export, your PC starts to feel a bit mushy. Unlike a CPU, which might cause a blue screen or a loud fan spike when it overheats, an SSD typically suffers in silence. It slows down to a fraction of its rated speed to save itself from melting, but it still might "work" during this. You'll notice that your PC starts to slow down and just feels a little bit sluggish.
Let’s say you’ve paid for a Gen5 SSD that promises 14,000 megabytes per second, but during a large Steam download or a 4K video export, your PC starts to feel a bit mushy. Unlike a CPU, which might cause a blue screen or a loud fan spike when it overheats, an SSD typically suffers in silence. It slows down to a fraction of its rated speed to save itself from melting, but it still might “work” during this. You’ll notice that your PC starts to slow down and just feels a little bit sluggish.
Jorge Luis Toro
Mexico
Mexico
Published by: aplhsindia.in
