• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

Overclocking an SSD

Rasterman

Member
Since SSDs are all solid state now, I wonder if anyone has tried cooling one with liquid nitrogen and overclocking it? Seems the problems would be changing the clock speed, and saturating the data bus?
 
Unlike with a hard drive, this is technically possible. It will probably require a custom reflash with a user-modified version of original firmware. No idea how to do it. It's your data though, so use at your own risk. 🙂
 
Originally posted by: jimhsu
Unlike with a hard drive, this is technically possible. It will probably require a custom reflash with a user-modified version of original firmware. No idea how to do it. It's your data though, so use at your own risk. 🙂

You cooled a mechanical HD with liquid nitrogen and overclocked it?
 
Originally posted by: Old Hippie
Originally posted by: jimhsu
Unlike with a hard drive, this is technically possible. It will probably require a custom reflash with a user-modified version of original firmware. No idea how to do it. It's your data though, so use at your own risk. 🙂

You cooled a mechanical HD with liquid nitrogen and overclocked it?

😕
 
Originally posted by: JLee
Originally posted by: Old Hippie
Originally posted by: jimhsu
Unlike with a hard drive, this is technically possible. It will probably require a custom reflash with a user-modified version of original firmware. No idea how to do it. It's your data though, so use at your own risk. 🙂

You cooled a mechanical HD with liquid nitrogen and overclocked it?

😕

I'm screwing up soo many things....just come and arrest me now for impersonating a human being! 😀
 
In the old days before PRML, I think you could actually overclock hard drives, after you do a low-level format and reconfigure the platters, rotation speed, etc. None of that is applicable today of course.
 
Back
Top