[SOLVED] Can an overheating M.2 damage a laptop's hardware?

Dennis_Orlando

Reputable
Apr 28, 2017
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4,510
So...
I was thinking about installing an M.2 chip (for more details -> https://coral.ai/products/m2-accelerator-bm),
on a vivobook s510 laptop.
That chip can easily reach 80 °C (maximum: 95-100°C), and since it fits in an m.2 slot it's not cooled whatsoever.
There's a video I found where you can see what the inside looks like ->
View: https://youtu.be/rLkO4MqQ9vA?t=190

Can the really high temperature cause some damage to other components? Like melting the "case" or something

!!NOTE!! It's not an SSD/NVMe drive! It's more like a second mini-processor designed to do particular operations
 
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Solution
It is in a small space, but at least it is near the edge of the board. It throttles when too hot so it should protect itself. That said, I've never seen an NVMe drive get anywhere near that hot even in tight spaces.
It is in a small space, but at least it is near the edge of the board. It throttles when too hot so it should protect itself. That said, I've never seen an NVMe drive get anywhere near that hot even in tight spaces.
Hi, thanks for the answer!
Well, as you said, the chip is designed to defend itself from his hot operating temperature....
But can THE LAPTOP defend itself from that hot chip inside of it?
I mean, look at that shiny hard drive next to the m.2: I'm not so sure if he wouldn't mind sitting next a mini-flamethrower... I'm not even sure if the heat can be absorbed by the case, resulting in a hot corner waiting
for me to touch it with my finger or something

..or maybe I'm just exxagerating and this temperature is not even so hot, but that's the reason I posted this thread :)
 

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