

The idea is that I won't have to flip the case around as much. The case is also technically over the weight limit of 12kg, but sometimes you just gotta be a reckless daredevil living on the edge. It's actually too small for the Fractal 7, (you need 42x24cm to cover the feet) but I had a shelf to put on the swivelbottom that works pretty well. Black fan screws because the ones that come with Arctic P140s are plain metal for some reason and that's not acceptable.Īt the casual suggestion of JayzTwoCents I bought what Americans call a lazy Susan, but I've decided to call a swivelbottom. Thermal Grizzly Krynoaut because I'm paranoid about CPU thermals.
#Inland premium 1tb diskmark zip#
Saw people talking about velcro earlier and maybe that'd be better, but too late, I've already got these small sidecutters and a bunch of zip ties. With AMD and Nvidia launches getting increasingly imminent, I've been preparing by buying a bunch of hopefully useful tool-like stuff. I'm considering buying a new paste and a new cooler, because apparently the cooler is damaged (with the substance) for good. But it's not a smell per se, and I can only feel it after a feel hours because it's the time it takes to intoxicate me? My guess is that this bad Arctic Silver spread into the heating metal in between the plates and I cannot clean it 100%, so the smell is always there. As weird as it sounds, I believe the the thermal paste might be intoxicating me? But even after switching to another old cooler master thermal paste I had, it hasn't stopped. Funny thing is, I only sense it after a few hours close to the PC, not straight away.

I started sensing this 'smell' so I reapplied it but the 'smell' still exists. The first.time I put it, I used far too much (it kind of spread out of the socket and greased the metal a bit). And she is very sensitive to smell.Īfter pondering about it for a while, I think it started.happening last time I switched the standard thermal paste that comes with the Ryzen 3600 stock cooler by an old tube of Arctic Silver 5. My GF cannot sense it every time I ask her.

The odd thing is, I'm the only one who feels it. What happens is that my nostrils kind of burn, like it's some chemical or something. It's not a burning smell per se, as something is actually burning. At first, I thought it was a burning smell because my nose was kind of 'burning', but it wasn't. Over the last couple of weeks, I started noticing an odd smell when using my PC. Most modern SATA SSDs have a difficult time writing more than 400 MB/s so it's not like the Inland NVMe 128GB is a step backwards compared to drives shipping today, but some older SATA SSDs can write sequential data a little faster.I'm having the weirdest issue I've ever seen. Sequential write performance scales up to 800 MB/s on the 256GB but only 400 MB/s on the 128GB. Sequential read performance comes to 1,500 MB/s and 1,300 MB/s. The Inland NVMe 256GB has a shallow performance drop off but the 128GB model steps over a cliff. The same drive also delivers up to 220,000 read and 150,000 write IOPS. The Inland NVMe 512GB tops the list with 1,550 MB/s sequential read and 950 MB/s sequential write speeds. Performance varies by size with the highest coming from the largest capacity. The Inland NVMe does come in 128GB, 256GB, and 512GB. There isn't a 1TB option at this time, so gamers looking for a large capacity, but budget-friendly, NVMe drive will have to look elsewhere.
#Inland premium 1tb diskmark professional#
Inland Professional is only courting a small portion of the market with this release.
