- May 19, 2011
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Tech_Junky started a recent thread about U.2 / U.3 which piqued my curiosity and so I've read up a little about it. Here's my understanding so far (feel free to correct me / supply more info):
M.2 without question has problems, most of which stem from a limited size area which also uses up a valuable amount of motherboard space. Its limited size in turn creates heat dissipation issues as discussed here:
forums.anandtech.com
My reading list so far:
www.pocnetwork.net
quarch.com
www.cdw.com
pocnetwork reports that U.2 can do up to 32,000MB/sec which seems like an obvious advantage to mention (M.2 gen 5 seems to be talking about 10k MB/sec - 15k). U.2 is hot-pluggable also.
pocnetwork also has a photo of a motherboard with a U.2 socket if anyone is interested in how that would look; it's similar in size to a couple of SATA ports by the looks of it.
Really though the main point for potential mainstream users is the idea that you can get your SSD away from other heat-generating devices like say a chunky graphics card or the processor; since SSDs will throttle bandwidth when they get hot enough and my (idle) M.2 SSD just by hitting near my (idle) graphics card will hit 50C (as opposed to about 37C without the graphics card, and even without a SSD heatsink). It also means that you can slap a chunky heatsink on the SSD and cool it with a large and near-silent fan if need be; basically a lot more flexibility for cooling solutions. U.2 also means that U.2 SSDs can be designed in a more spacious manner so they dissipate heat better since they're not longer limited by the size of the connector and the possible space allotted by the design of the motherboard.
One thing that concerns me with the U.2 / U.3 standard is that compatibility-wise it seems to be off to a messy start: U.2 drives are apparently not compatible with U.3 hosts but U.3 drives are compatible with U.2 hosts.
M.2 without question has problems, most of which stem from a limited size area which also uses up a valuable amount of motherboard space. Its limited size in turn creates heat dissipation issues as discussed here:
Gen5 NVMe have active cooling
https://hothardware.com/news/consumer-pcie-gen-5-ssds-sale-in-japan A fan on an SSD? This is really getting quite ridiculous. These things are turning into GPUs.

My reading list so far:

What you can do with that U.2 port on your motherboard next to the SATA inputs | Poc Network // Tech
So you bought a new motherboard and you are getting ready to build your new system when you realize that there is this U.2 connection right by the SATA inputs. Now, if you are reading this, you likely don't know what that is and are wondering what on Earth you can do with it. U.2


What you need to know about U.3 | Automated Testing Tools
What does U.3 mean for the ever-developing data storage industry? Here's a hardware engineer's perspective on this drive host controller

M.2 vs NVMe vs. 2.5" vs. U.2 SSDS
The types of SSDs include the 2.5”, the M.2, U.2 and NVMe PCIe SSD, each offering distinct advantages and disadvantages. Learn more here.
pocnetwork reports that U.2 can do up to 32,000MB/sec which seems like an obvious advantage to mention (M.2 gen 5 seems to be talking about 10k MB/sec - 15k). U.2 is hot-pluggable also.
pocnetwork also has a photo of a motherboard with a U.2 socket if anyone is interested in how that would look; it's similar in size to a couple of SATA ports by the looks of it.
Really though the main point for potential mainstream users is the idea that you can get your SSD away from other heat-generating devices like say a chunky graphics card or the processor; since SSDs will throttle bandwidth when they get hot enough and my (idle) M.2 SSD just by hitting near my (idle) graphics card will hit 50C (as opposed to about 37C without the graphics card, and even without a SSD heatsink). It also means that you can slap a chunky heatsink on the SSD and cool it with a large and near-silent fan if need be; basically a lot more flexibility for cooling solutions. U.2 also means that U.2 SSDs can be designed in a more spacious manner so they dissipate heat better since they're not longer limited by the size of the connector and the possible space allotted by the design of the motherboard.
One thing that concerns me with the U.2 / U.3 standard is that compatibility-wise it seems to be off to a messy start: U.2 drives are apparently not compatible with U.3 hosts but U.3 drives are compatible with U.2 hosts.