Crucial T705 2TB PCIe Gen5 NVMe M.2 SSD - Up to 14,500 MB/s - Game Ready - Internal Solid State Drive (PC) - +1mo Adobe CC - CT2000T705SSD3


Sold by:
Inhouse product

Price:
$159.99

Capacity:
Style:
Quantity:
(86585 available)

Total Price:
Refund:
Share:

  • EXTREME GEN5 SPEEDS: Get sequential reads/writes of up to 14,500/12,700MB/s and random read/writes of up to 1,550K/1,800K IOPS for blazing performance
  • ULTIMATE GAMING & CREATIVITY: Load AAA game titles up to 15% faster than Gen4 SSDs with Microsoft DirectStorage. Experience the future of gaming with up to faster texture renders and reduced load times, render photos or UHD/8K+ videos, and run heavy workloads with up to less CPU utilization.
  • EASY TO INSTALL: Ready for performance with your motherboard heatsink, the T705 installs easily in your M.2 slot. Its copper-clad label is designed to effectively transfer heat from the drive to the heatsink for maximum performance.
  • COMPATIBILITY: Produced in house with cutting-edge Micron 232-layer TLC NAND for Intel Core 13-14th Gen and AMD Ryzen 7000 CPUs
  • ADOBE CREATIVE CLOUD: Get one month of Adobe Creative Cloud All-Apps plan on us when you purchase and register the Crucial T705
  • REOLINK
  • ANNKE
  • Amcrest
  • ZOSI
  • Lorex
  • See all options
Digital Storage Capacity 2 TB
Hard Disk Interface Solid State
Connectivity Technology PCIe
Brand Crucial
Special Feature Hardware Encryption
Hard Disk Description Solid State Drive
Compatible Devices Desktop, Gaming Console, Workstation
Installation Type Internal Hard Drive
Color Black
Hard Disk Size 2 TB

Hold on tight, the Crucial T705 Gen5 NVMe SSD is taking Gen5 performance to the max. With sequential reads and writes** up to 14,500MB/s and 12,700MB/s (up to 1,550K/1,800K IOPS random reads/writes**), the T705 offers faster gaming, video editing, 3D rendering and heavy workload application processing. Built with Micron232-layer TLC NAND3 and ready for use with your motherboard’s heatsink*, the Crucial T705 Gen5 SSD is fully optimized for performance, takes full advantage of MicrosoftDirectStorage, and is backward compatible with Gen3 and Gen4 motherboards. With SSD speeds***** nearly 2x faster than Gen4, you’ll never look back from the Crucial T705! * Non-heatsink versions of the Crucial T705 must be installed with a motherboard or alternate heatsink to achieve optimal performance. ** Typical I/O performance as measured using CrystalDiskMark® with a queue depth of 512 and write cache enabled. Windows 11 Core isolation disabled for performance measurement. Fresh out-of-box (FOB) state is assumed. For performance measurement purposes, the SSD may be restored to FOB state using the secure erase command. System variations will affect measured results. *** See Micron.com/products/nand-flash for more information. **** Under typical conditions for airflow and ambient temperature, our pre-installed premium heatsink allows the T705 Gen5 SSD to run at max workload without the need to thermal throttle. Comparisons made to SSD temperatures without a cooling apparatus. Please ensure your drive has proper airflow for maximum performance. ***** Compared to Crucial T500 Gen4 NVMe® SSD listed speed of 7,400MB/s. Actual speed may vary. ****** Some storage capacity is used for formatting and other purposes and is not available for data storage. 1GB equals 1 billion bytes. ******* Compared to Gen5 SSD performance without DirectStorage, based on internal test results with supported GPU that uses GPU decompression. ******** Compared to Crucial MX500 SATA SSD listed speed of 560MB/s. Actual speed may vary. ********* Fresh-out-of-box (FOB) performance measured with a typical Microsoft workload compared to the FOB average performance of Micron 3400 & 3500 SSDs with similar workloads. ********** Warranty valid for 5 years from the original date of purchase or before writing the maximum total bytes written (TBW) as published in the product datasheet and as measured in the product’s SMART data, whichever comes first. *********** One-month complimentary Adobe® Creative Cloud personal All Apps plan available with eligible Crucial SSD purchase. Adobe Creative Cloud ID and Crucial product registration required for redemption. Eligible Crucial T705 SSDs: CT1000T705SSD3, CT2000T705SSD3, CT4000T705SSD3, CT1000T705SSD5, CT2000T705SSD5, CT4000T705SSD5 or CT2000T705SSD5A must be purchased between March 12 and December 31, 2024. Offer limited to one redemption per eligible Crucial SSD purchase and registration; up to two per Adobe Creative Cloud user account, subject to acceptance of applicable Terms of Use, while activation code supplies last. Additional terms and conditions may apply. Micron Technology reserves the right to change or discontinue this offer at any time without notice. ************ To ensure optimal performance and maintain your T705 SSD’s warranty when installing with an in-motherboard heatsink, you must not remove the copper-clad label. ************ Compared to an average of the bandwidth for Micron 3400 & 3500 SSDs.

  • adsbamyvcz@gmail.com

    08-03-2026

    Im Zuge meines Umstiegs auf Windows 11 baue ich mir gerade einen komplett neuen Hochleistungs-PC, da mein jetziges System stolze 15 Jahre alt ist. Diese SSD ist dabei ein zentraler Baustein und wird für einen echten Quantensprung sorgen.Im Vergleich zu meiner aktuellen 2,5-Zoll-SATA-SSD ist die Leistung dieses Speichers eine völlig andere Welt. Während meine alte Platte bei ca. 500 MB/s an ihre Grenzen stößt, bietet diese hier eine Lese- und Schreibgeschwindigkeit, die um ein Vielfaches höher ist. Klar, so viel Leistung hat ihren Preis, aber für mein geplantes System ist sie absolut perfekt.Diese 2 TB-SSD wird als Hauptlaufwerk für das Betriebssystem und alle Programme dienen. Das Ziel ist ein Rechner, der stark genug ist, um eine KI lokal zu betreiben. Als blinder Mensch ist KI für mich eine essenzielle Hilfe, besonders bei meiner Arbeit im Social-Media-Bereich. Ein eigenes, lokales System macht mich unabhängig von Drittanbietern, für die ich aktuell über 20 € im Monat zahle, und spart langfristig Geld.Auch wenn ich die SSD noch nicht im Einsatz habe, haben mich die vielen positiven Testberichte restlos überzeugt. Ich werde diese Bewertung auf jeden Fall aktualisieren, sobald mein System fertig ist und läuft. Ich bin mir aber schon jetzt sicher, dass der Performance-Unterschied im Vergleich zu meiner alten SSD gewaltig sein wird.

  • stevie@microsoft.com

    08-03-2026

    Als Technik-Nerd hat mich die Crucial T705 2 TB PCIe Gen5 NVMe SSD vom ersten Moment an beeindruckt. Die pure Leistung ist schlicht brachial: Mit sequenziellen Leseraten von bis zu 14.500 MB/s und Schreibraten jenseits der 12.000 MB/s katapultiert sie jedes System in eine neue Dimension der Geschwindigkeit. Große Datenmengen – egal ob 8K-Videomaterial, komplexe 3D-Modelle oder gigantische Spielebibliotheken – werden in Rekordzeit bewegt.Der eingesetzte Controller in Kombination mit modernem 232-Layer TLC NAND und einem großzügigen DRAM-Cache sorgt nicht nur für Spitzenwerte in Benchmarks, sondern auch für konstant hohe Performance im Dauerbetrieb. Selbst bei langen Transfers bleibt die Geschwindigkeit stabil, ohne dass thermische Drosselung früh einsetzt – vorausgesetzt, das Kühldesign des Mainboards ist darauf ausgelegt.Besonders angenehm: Die SSD ist abwärtskompatibel zu PCIe 4.0 und 3.0. Damit kann sie auch in älteren Systemen betrieben werden und zeigt trotzdem beeindruckende Werte – perfekt für ein zukünftiges Upgrade auf ein volles PCIe-Gen5-Setup.Installation im M.2-Slot ist in Sekunden erledigt, und die Verarbeitungsqualität wirkt absolut hochwertig. Das kupferbeschichtete Label zur passiven Wärmeableitung ist nicht nur funktional, sondern unterstreicht auch den Premium-Charakter.Fazit: Wer Wert auf kompromisslose Geschwindigkeit, modernste Technik und zuverlässige Leistung legt, bekommt mit der Crucial T705 ein echtes High-End-Laufwerk, das in Sachen Datendurchsatz aktuell ganz vorne mitspielt. Absolute 5-Sterne-Empfehlung!

  • dudaginajenna@protonmail.com

    08-03-2026

    Great drive, fast and a upgrade overbthe t705. Using this as my main boot drive and works great 5.0 slot max speed. I have it water cooled so it's very cool.

  • rolaxchminting@gmail.com

    08-03-2026

    Very fast NVMe drive, living up to its specifications. Benchmarks close to its specs and, in real world usage, is noticeably faster than a Gen4 drive. This drive runs hot (like, apparently all Gen5 drives) and benefits from active cooling, either through an attach active heatsink or, at least, a fan blowing on it or a large motherboard heatsink.

  • dorothyxdjenniferak8215@gmail.com

    08-03-2026

    You might think (as I did) that you’re doing better by getting this OEM heatsink version – paying about $30 extra. I learned the lesson in a hard way that; exactly the opposite holds true. Crucial periodically runs deals; selling heatsink version even cheaper than naked drive. Don’t fall for that and simply buy the naked drive, whatever the price. Otherwise (if you buy heatsink version); you’ll either have to do below surgery (which is not for the faint-hearted) or your drive will fail earlier (because of heat) and Crucial will blame you running it that way (and very likely not honor your warranty – more on that later).This Gen.5 T705 is an extremely fast M2 drive. I’m very happy with its unbelievable performance. I use it on my new Asrock Taichi Lite Z890 motherboard. After I assembled my PC, I noticed that the hottest temperature on my system is this M2 drive. Not CPU, not GPU, not RAM modules and not my Gen.4 Samsung 990 Pro M2. While PC is completely idle (not running anything); that Crucial M2 displayed 61C temperature. I stress-tested my GPU (which is milimeters away from this Crucial) and that 61C quickly rose close to 80C (mind you; I’m not even stressing that drive itself). I immediately decided to replace that tiny OEM heatsink, as it’s completely not up to par for a decent cooling job.I’ll number my attached pics – so you can relate to my text here.I use HWiNFO64 freeware to check all my system characteristics. When you look at its reporting for this Crucial drive (pic-1); you’ll see that the drive keeps (in it) record of how long you used it at above 87C (warning) and 89C (critical). So if you (without even being aware) barbecue your drive and send it in for warranty replacement (when it fails); you can guess who Crucial will put the blame on?Now all new MBs put both that Gen.5 M2 slot and Gen.5 GPU slot right next to CPU (distance has to be short). You can see from (pic-2) that; this M2 drive is literally sandwitched between towering wall of GPU (no heat escape that direction) and my humongous Noctua NH-D15 G2 CPU cooler (airflow is there, towards rear suction fan). But it’s absolutely clear that; this OEM Crucial heatsink is just too small to provide adequate cooling. I even didn’t try Asrock MB’s original heatsink for that slot (as it’s even smaller). So it’s not even a matter of preference; you simply got to replace that OEM heatsink. That’s why it’s much easier to buy a naked drive to begin with; so you can avoid below pain of surgery.Another point; those Gen.5 M2 drives are just going thru initial growing pains (in fact, Crucial is still the only company to offer such speed-demon drive). Why is it putting out that much heat?; that is the first question (even more heat than Z890 chipset itself – which works fine with about same size heatsink). You’ll see on one of my attached pics (when I took out the naked drive); there is metal body Phison controller there (where actual two RAM chips have plastic body). Probably that much heat is coming from that Phison controller – not the RAM chips. If those Gen.5 M2 drives are all to put out so much heat; then industry will probably evolve to a different casing – so they can be cooled like CPUs. Time will tell.After searching many M2 heatsinks (active and passive); I decided on this passive Thermalright HR-09 2280 PRO (pic-3). There are ones with active fan cooling. But such small fans always fail in short time and they are noisy. So I went with this largest passive heatsink I could find. I hope that Noctua also starts making large M2 heatsinks. My Phanteks full-tower case can even house twice the height. Width-wise (as you are seeing in pic-3) it’s literally 1 milimeter from CPU cooler. Even if it touches there; no problem, as nothing moving (it might even get better cooling that way). When I run my PC with this new heatsink; Crucial M2 fall back to 47C. Still the hottest component on that motherboard; but much better than previous 61C with OEM heatsink on it. My other Gen.4 Samsung 990 Pro M2 runs at 42C anyway (under Asrock’s large metal surface heatsink). If I ever see my usage pushing it to above 80C; I’ll simply tweak my BIOS fan curve, to run my case fans faster / earlier. So far, 14C saving is good enough for me.Now on to surgery : how to remove naked Crucial drive from it’s OEM heatsink.I repeat: this process needs only two special tools (that you have to use), but more importantly very precise hand control (I happened to make my living as field service engineer – so it’s all easy for me). If you slip your hand once; you can instantly ruin your expensive drive. If you are not sure; don’t even try, I’d humbly suggest.You’ll need an anti-static mat (see wrist connection on pic-4) and blade opener tool (pic-5). No, you can not use a knife or flat-blade screwdriver instead. You were warned.On the side of the drive, you’ll notice two dimple dots on the edges and one flat line (blue arrows on pic-6). Insert your tool firmly but very slowly till you only pass that middle-line (if you push it all the way in; you’ll instantly damage the board/components of your drive; you can throw it away at that point). Once you merely pass that middle-line apply sideways leverage to rock it out of its grasp. Also do the same on both dimple dots. You’ll feel that the bottom casing cover slightly moved (pic-7). Now switch to other side with your tool and do the same there. As you slowly and patiently repeat that left & right few times; the bottom cover will start to come out (pic-8). Attention to the blue sticker indicated by arrow on that pic. As slowly pulling out that bottom metal cover; you’ll be peeling that sticker. No hasty movements there, as you don’t want to damage anything. Now that cover completely comes out (pics 9, 10).Now you remain with your naked drive sticking to actual heatsink, by blue-stickers on the other side (pic-11). This is the step needing utmost precision: you insert your tool between that blue-sticker and heatsink (and NOT between blue-sticker and the chip!). See detail on pic-12. You very slowly push your tool deeper towards other side (so; sideways, not length-wise). You are separating that blue-tape from the heatsink. Don’t you dare to yank the board by pulling length-wise; It’s a very thin board and you’ll simply snap it in two. Just be patient and do above described on those 3 blue-stickers from side to side.After enough loosening of stickers; finally lift your naked drive sideways (never pull length-wise). Pic-13.Now you have to clean all remnants of blue-stickers from both side of your naked drive. You’ll use your fingers and nails doing that (do not use any tool, as you can damage those microscopic components on board.Now your drive is finally ready to be mounted on to new heatsink (pic-14). Follow the simple instructions which come with heatsink. Just pay attention to orientation before you stick on to it; so you don’t put upside down. You’ll also need to align screw-hole of your drive and heatsink. After you place the bottom metal cover; you first firmly push it towards heatsink (firm, but not crushing hard) > then you tighten 4 side screws. So it gets good thermal conductivity thru new stickers on both sides.The hole of that new heatsink lines up with “screw-hole” of your drive. My Asrock motherboard has such “tool-less” rotating notch for that hole. So I was able to slide that notch between heatsink and M2 board. Pay attention how your motherboard mounting is (actually even before starting all this adventure). Because if you need to use an actual screw to mount your M2 drive to your MB; now you’ll need much longer version of this very tiny mounting screw. If your MB also has such “tool-less” thingy, I hope that it’ll also slide in as described above.If you are reading this before you actually bought your drive; I presume that at this point you decided to buy the naked version and avoid that Crucial heatsink nightmare at all cost, correct?!

  • odzgdz@gmail.com

    08-03-2026

    Blazing fast. Temps a bit on the high side however not throttling. Very happy with this purchase .Good quality, and easy install

  • kimadelaide@gmali.com

    08-03-2026

    Blazing fast and rock solid reliability - the perfect 2tb drive for AM5.

  • rickie91@rohan.biz

    08-03-2026

    This is an interesting piece of hardware. This particular NVME SSD Gen 5.0 exceeded read and write speeds for me in Crystal Disk, and that was on a working "C" drive. This Gen 5.0 drive cooks, and in more ways than one. Running this in the Gen 5.0 slot on a Gigabyte X670E motherboard.I made the error of initially installing this drive on an add in card with no heatsink to clone to as the target drive. I thought since the add in card drive PCIe slot was rated at 4.0, and not 5.0, I would not have to worry about temperatures. WRONG. The drive shut down after about 20 seconds, which I believe to be the temperature high limit was tripped. You absolutely have to run this SSD with a good heatsink, no matter what you are doing with it.I did not think the Motherboard heatsink was going to cut it, and installed a Thermalright heat pipe heat sink on the Crucial T705. This is a good heat-sink, but despite that, running Crystal Disk, and the heat-sink sitting above a hot RTX 4080 Super back plate, the drive still hit 80 Degrees C. running the Write portion of the Crystal Disk benchmark. This is in a well ventilated Case, but with an AIO over the CPU, this is kind of a dead space. I am going to get a slightly larger SSD cooler, with a fan. It helps if I run the RTX 4080 fans all the time to cool the video card and not transmit so much heat to the SSD cooler, but I am not gaming all the time nor do I want my Video Card fans running constantly. These are just some caveats to look out for.The Crucial T705 SSD is running flawlessly, and yes, games and programs do load faster. The associated Crucial Storage Executive is fine, but if you are used to the Samsung Tool Box, you will be disappointed.You are best off with an aftermarket cooling solution, as I do not think the "stock" heat sink some of the models come with would be adequate for file transfers, especially being so close to a hot Video Card. Tom's Hardware has some good testing reviews on Gen 5.0 SSD heatsinks with heat pipes. Cheers!

  • hardy.ebert@hotmail.com

    08-03-2026

    très satisfait d'avoir acheté cette article , Crucial T705 SSD 2To PCIe Gen5 NVMe M.2 SSD Interne Gaming avec Dissipateur , pour tous les futurs acheteur n'ayez aucune crainte d' acheter c'est l'un des meilleurs SSD avec sont dissipateur qui fonctionne a merveille

  • isaacgseemo@gmail.com

    08-03-2026

    Crucial is a reliable brand for computer drives and this NVMe is very good. The 5th gen speed isn't really noticeable when gaming (I play single player mostly) but it feels a bit faster (than say a 4th gen) when transferring files (i did a 100gb sample using bunch of movies/games) from this drive to a connected external Samsung drive with a 10gbs usbc connection (sorry never used a 3rd gen as was still on sata then upgraded to 4th). Yes, would buy again. Very nice. Great success.

There have been no reviews for this product yet.
  • ads******

    Im Zuge meines Umstiegs auf Windows 11 baue ich mir gerade einen komplett neuen Hochleistungs-PC, da mein jetziges System stolze 15 Jahre alt ist. Diese SSD ist dabei ein zentraler Baustein und wird für einen echten Quantensprung sorgen.Im Vergleich zu meiner aktuellen 2,5-Zoll-SATA-SSD ist die Leistung dieses Speichers eine völlig andere Welt. Während meine alte Platte bei ca. 500 MB/s an ihre Grenzen stößt, bietet diese hier eine Lese- und Schreibgeschwindigkeit, die um ein Vielfaches höher ist. Klar, so viel Leistung hat ihren Preis, aber für mein geplantes System ist sie absolut perfekt.Diese 2 TB-SSD wird als Hauptlaufwerk für das Betriebssystem und alle Programme dienen. Das Ziel ist ein Rechner, der stark genug ist, um eine KI lokal zu betreiben. Als blinder Mensch ist KI für mich eine essenzielle Hilfe, besonders bei meiner Arbeit im Social-Media-Bereich. Ein eigenes, lokales System macht mich unabhängig von Drittanbietern, für die ich aktuell über 20 € im Monat zahle, und spart langfristig Geld.Auch wenn ich die SSD noch nicht im Einsatz habe, haben mich die vielen positiven Testberichte restlos überzeugt. Ich werde diese Bewertung auf jeden Fall aktualisieren, sobald mein System fertig ist und läuft. Ich bin mir aber schon jetzt sicher, dass der Performance-Unterschied im Vergleich zu meiner alten SSD gewaltig sein wird.

  • ste******

    Als Technik-Nerd hat mich die Crucial T705 2 TB PCIe Gen5 NVMe SSD vom ersten Moment an beeindruckt. Die pure Leistung ist schlicht brachial: Mit sequenziellen Leseraten von bis zu 14.500 MB/s und Schreibraten jenseits der 12.000 MB/s katapultiert sie jedes System in eine neue Dimension der Geschwindigkeit. Große Datenmengen – egal ob 8K-Videomaterial, komplexe 3D-Modelle oder gigantische Spielebibliotheken – werden in Rekordzeit bewegt.Der eingesetzte Controller in Kombination mit modernem 232-Layer TLC NAND und einem großzügigen DRAM-Cache sorgt nicht nur für Spitzenwerte in Benchmarks, sondern auch für konstant hohe Performance im Dauerbetrieb. Selbst bei langen Transfers bleibt die Geschwindigkeit stabil, ohne dass thermische Drosselung früh einsetzt – vorausgesetzt, das Kühldesign des Mainboards ist darauf ausgelegt.Besonders angenehm: Die SSD ist abwärtskompatibel zu PCIe 4.0 und 3.0. Damit kann sie auch in älteren Systemen betrieben werden und zeigt trotzdem beeindruckende Werte – perfekt für ein zukünftiges Upgrade auf ein volles PCIe-Gen5-Setup.Installation im M.2-Slot ist in Sekunden erledigt, und die Verarbeitungsqualität wirkt absolut hochwertig. Das kupferbeschichtete Label zur passiven Wärmeableitung ist nicht nur funktional, sondern unterstreicht auch den Premium-Charakter.Fazit: Wer Wert auf kompromisslose Geschwindigkeit, modernste Technik und zuverlässige Leistung legt, bekommt mit der Crucial T705 ein echtes High-End-Laufwerk, das in Sachen Datendurchsatz aktuell ganz vorne mitspielt. Absolute 5-Sterne-Empfehlung!

  • dud******

    Great drive, fast and a upgrade overbthe t705. Using this as my main boot drive and works great 5.0 slot max speed. I have it water cooled so it's very cool.

  • rol******

    Very fast NVMe drive, living up to its specifications. Benchmarks close to its specs and, in real world usage, is noticeably faster than a Gen4 drive. This drive runs hot (like, apparently all Gen5 drives) and benefits from active cooling, either through an attach active heatsink or, at least, a fan blowing on it or a large motherboard heatsink.

  • dor******

    You might think (as I did) that you’re doing better by getting this OEM heatsink version – paying about $30 extra. I learned the lesson in a hard way that; exactly the opposite holds true. Crucial periodically runs deals; selling heatsink version even cheaper than naked drive. Don’t fall for that and simply buy the naked drive, whatever the price. Otherwise (if you buy heatsink version); you’ll either have to do below surgery (which is not for the faint-hearted) or your drive will fail earlier (because of heat) and Crucial will blame you running it that way (and very likely not honor your warranty – more on that later).This Gen.5 T705 is an extremely fast M2 drive. I’m very happy with its unbelievable performance. I use it on my new Asrock Taichi Lite Z890 motherboard. After I assembled my PC, I noticed that the hottest temperature on my system is this M2 drive. Not CPU, not GPU, not RAM modules and not my Gen.4 Samsung 990 Pro M2. While PC is completely idle (not running anything); that Crucial M2 displayed 61C temperature. I stress-tested my GPU (which is milimeters away from this Crucial) and that 61C quickly rose close to 80C (mind you; I’m not even stressing that drive itself). I immediately decided to replace that tiny OEM heatsink, as it’s completely not up to par for a decent cooling job.I’ll number my attached pics – so you can relate to my text here.I use HWiNFO64 freeware to check all my system characteristics. When you look at its reporting for this Crucial drive (pic-1); you’ll see that the drive keeps (in it) record of how long you used it at above 87C (warning) and 89C (critical). So if you (without even being aware) barbecue your drive and send it in for warranty replacement (when it fails); you can guess who Crucial will put the blame on?Now all new MBs put both that Gen.5 M2 slot and Gen.5 GPU slot right next to CPU (distance has to be short). You can see from (pic-2) that; this M2 drive is literally sandwitched between towering wall of GPU (no heat escape that direction) and my humongous Noctua NH-D15 G2 CPU cooler (airflow is there, towards rear suction fan). But it’s absolutely clear that; this OEM Crucial heatsink is just too small to provide adequate cooling. I even didn’t try Asrock MB’s original heatsink for that slot (as it’s even smaller). So it’s not even a matter of preference; you simply got to replace that OEM heatsink. That’s why it’s much easier to buy a naked drive to begin with; so you can avoid below pain of surgery.Another point; those Gen.5 M2 drives are just going thru initial growing pains (in fact, Crucial is still the only company to offer such speed-demon drive). Why is it putting out that much heat?; that is the first question (even more heat than Z890 chipset itself – which works fine with about same size heatsink). You’ll see on one of my attached pics (when I took out the naked drive); there is metal body Phison controller there (where actual two RAM chips have plastic body). Probably that much heat is coming from that Phison controller – not the RAM chips. If those Gen.5 M2 drives are all to put out so much heat; then industry will probably evolve to a different casing – so they can be cooled like CPUs. Time will tell.After searching many M2 heatsinks (active and passive); I decided on this passive Thermalright HR-09 2280 PRO (pic-3). There are ones with active fan cooling. But such small fans always fail in short time and they are noisy. So I went with this largest passive heatsink I could find. I hope that Noctua also starts making large M2 heatsinks. My Phanteks full-tower case can even house twice the height. Width-wise (as you are seeing in pic-3) it’s literally 1 milimeter from CPU cooler. Even if it touches there; no problem, as nothing moving (it might even get better cooling that way). When I run my PC with this new heatsink; Crucial M2 fall back to 47C. Still the hottest component on that motherboard; but much better than previous 61C with OEM heatsink on it. My other Gen.4 Samsung 990 Pro M2 runs at 42C anyway (under Asrock’s large metal surface heatsink). If I ever see my usage pushing it to above 80C; I’ll simply tweak my BIOS fan curve, to run my case fans faster / earlier. So far, 14C saving is good enough for me.Now on to surgery : how to remove naked Crucial drive from it’s OEM heatsink.I repeat: this process needs only two special tools (that you have to use), but more importantly very precise hand control (I happened to make my living as field service engineer – so it’s all easy for me). If you slip your hand once; you can instantly ruin your expensive drive. If you are not sure; don’t even try, I’d humbly suggest.You’ll need an anti-static mat (see wrist connection on pic-4) and blade opener tool (pic-5). No, you can not use a knife or flat-blade screwdriver instead. You were warned.On the side of the drive, you’ll notice two dimple dots on the edges and one flat line (blue arrows on pic-6). Insert your tool firmly but very slowly till you only pass that middle-line (if you push it all the way in; you’ll instantly damage the board/components of your drive; you can throw it away at that point). Once you merely pass that middle-line apply sideways leverage to rock it out of its grasp. Also do the same on both dimple dots. You’ll feel that the bottom casing cover slightly moved (pic-7). Now switch to other side with your tool and do the same there. As you slowly and patiently repeat that left & right few times; the bottom cover will start to come out (pic-8). Attention to the blue sticker indicated by arrow on that pic. As slowly pulling out that bottom metal cover; you’ll be peeling that sticker. No hasty movements there, as you don’t want to damage anything. Now that cover completely comes out (pics 9, 10).Now you remain with your naked drive sticking to actual heatsink, by blue-stickers on the other side (pic-11). This is the step needing utmost precision: you insert your tool between that blue-sticker and heatsink (and NOT between blue-sticker and the chip!). See detail on pic-12. You very slowly push your tool deeper towards other side (so; sideways, not length-wise). You are separating that blue-tape from the heatsink. Don’t you dare to yank the board by pulling length-wise; It’s a very thin board and you’ll simply snap it in two. Just be patient and do above described on those 3 blue-stickers from side to side.After enough loosening of stickers; finally lift your naked drive sideways (never pull length-wise). Pic-13.Now you have to clean all remnants of blue-stickers from both side of your naked drive. You’ll use your fingers and nails doing that (do not use any tool, as you can damage those microscopic components on board.Now your drive is finally ready to be mounted on to new heatsink (pic-14). Follow the simple instructions which come with heatsink. Just pay attention to orientation before you stick on to it; so you don’t put upside down. You’ll also need to align screw-hole of your drive and heatsink. After you place the bottom metal cover; you first firmly push it towards heatsink (firm, but not crushing hard) > then you tighten 4 side screws. So it gets good thermal conductivity thru new stickers on both sides.The hole of that new heatsink lines up with “screw-hole” of your drive. My Asrock motherboard has such “tool-less” rotating notch for that hole. So I was able to slide that notch between heatsink and M2 board. Pay attention how your motherboard mounting is (actually even before starting all this adventure). Because if you need to use an actual screw to mount your M2 drive to your MB; now you’ll need much longer version of this very tiny mounting screw. If your MB also has such “tool-less” thingy, I hope that it’ll also slide in as described above.If you are reading this before you actually bought your drive; I presume that at this point you decided to buy the naked version and avoid that Crucial heatsink nightmare at all cost, correct?!

    Image Image Image Image Image Image Image Image Image

  • odz******

    Blazing fast. Temps a bit on the high side however not throttling. Very happy with this purchase .Good quality, and easy install

  • kim******

    Blazing fast and rock solid reliability - the perfect 2tb drive for AM5.

  • ric******

    This is an interesting piece of hardware. This particular NVME SSD Gen 5.0 exceeded read and write speeds for me in Crystal Disk, and that was on a working "C" drive. This Gen 5.0 drive cooks, and in more ways than one. Running this in the Gen 5.0 slot on a Gigabyte X670E motherboard.I made the error of initially installing this drive on an add in card with no heatsink to clone to as the target drive. I thought since the add in card drive PCIe slot was rated at 4.0, and not 5.0, I would not have to worry about temperatures. WRONG. The drive shut down after about 20 seconds, which I believe to be the temperature high limit was tripped. You absolutely have to run this SSD with a good heatsink, no matter what you are doing with it.I did not think the Motherboard heatsink was going to cut it, and installed a Thermalright heat pipe heat sink on the Crucial T705. This is a good heat-sink, but despite that, running Crystal Disk, and the heat-sink sitting above a hot RTX 4080 Super back plate, the drive still hit 80 Degrees C. running the Write portion of the Crystal Disk benchmark. This is in a well ventilated Case, but with an AIO over the CPU, this is kind of a dead space. I am going to get a slightly larger SSD cooler, with a fan. It helps if I run the RTX 4080 fans all the time to cool the video card and not transmit so much heat to the SSD cooler, but I am not gaming all the time nor do I want my Video Card fans running constantly. These are just some caveats to look out for.The Crucial T705 SSD is running flawlessly, and yes, games and programs do load faster. The associated Crucial Storage Executive is fine, but if you are used to the Samsung Tool Box, you will be disappointed.You are best off with an aftermarket cooling solution, as I do not think the "stock" heat sink some of the models come with would be adequate for file transfers, especially being so close to a hot Video Card. Tom's Hardware has some good testing reviews on Gen 5.0 SSD heatsinks with heat pipes. Cheers!

  • har******

    très satisfait d'avoir acheté cette article , Crucial T705 SSD 2To PCIe Gen5 NVMe M.2 SSD Interne Gaming avec Dissipateur , pour tous les futurs acheteur n'ayez aucune crainte d' acheter c'est l'un des meilleurs SSD avec sont dissipateur qui fonctionne a merveille

  • isa******

    Crucial is a reliable brand for computer drives and this NVMe is very good. The 5th gen speed isn't really noticeable when gaming (I play single player mostly) but it feels a bit faster (than say a 4th gen) when transferring files (i did a 100gb sample using bunch of movies/games) from this drive to a connected external Samsung drive with a 10gbs usbc connection (sorry never used a 3rd gen as was still on sata then upgraded to 4th). Yes, would buy again. Very nice. Great success.

Crucial Brand Story Previous page Crucial Brand Story Crucial Brand Story Crucial Brand Story Crucial Brand Story Crucial Brand Story Crucial Brand Story

Shop Internal SSDs

Crucial X10 Pro 2TB Portable SSD Crucial X9 Pro 2TB Portable SSD Crucial X9 Pro for Mac 2TB Portable SSD Crucial X9 2TB Portable SSD

Shop External SSDs

Crucial Pro 32GB DDR5 RAM Kit (2x16GB),CL36 6000MHz Crucial Pro 32GB DDR5 RAM Kit (2x16GB), 5600MHz Crucial 16GB DDR5 RAM Laptop Memory Kit (2x8GB), 5600MHz Crucial 16GB DDR4 RAM Kit (2x8GB), 3200MHz

Shop DRAM

Crucial Brand Story Next page T705 NVMe SSD T705 NVMe Internal SSD Crucial T705 T705 NVMe Internal SSD Blur the line between virtual and reality

• Blistering speed

• Outperforms7 yesterday's fastest SSDs without greatly increasing power consumption

T705 NVMe Internal SSD Crucial’s best-in-slot Gen5 gaming SSD

• Load AAA games up to 15% faster2 with DirectStorage

• Unlock the potential for more detailed textures2

• Enjoy faster gameplay and sharper graphics2

T705 NVMe Internal SSD No-compromise premium heatsink

• Aluminum and copper design

• Maximum heat dissipation3

• No noisy fans or liquid cooling

• Non-heatsink option1 available

T705 NVMe Internal SSD Revolutionary speed meets compatibility

• Works with Intel Core 13-14th Gen CPUs

• Works with AMD Ryzen 7000 series CPUs

• Powerful performance for AI apps and more

• Backward compatible with Gen3 and Gen4 systems

Crucial T705 NVMe Internal SSD

Non-heatsink versions of the Crucial T705 must be installed with a motherboard or alternate heatsink to achieve optimal performance. Typical I/O performance as measured using CrystalDiskMark with a queue depth of 512 and write cache enabled. Windows 11 Core isolation disabled for performance measurement. Fresh out-of-box (FOB) state is assumed. For performance measurement purposes, the SSD may be restored to FOB state using the secure erase command. System variations will affect measured results. Under typical conditions for airflow and ambient temperature, our pre-installed premium heatsink allows the T705 Gen5 SSD to run at max workload without the need to thermal throttle. Comparisons made to SSD temperatures without a cooling apparatus. Please ensure your drive has proper airflow for maximum performance. Compared to Crucial T500 Gen4 NVMe SSD listed speed of 7,400MB/s. Actual speed may vary. Some storage capacity is used for formatting and other purposes and is not available for data storage. 1GB equals 1 billion bytes. Compared to Gen5 SSD performance without DirectStorage, based on internal test results with supported GPU that uses GPU decompression. Compared to Crucial MX500 SATA SSD listed speed of 560MB/s. Actual speed may vary. Fresh-out-of-box (FOB) performance measured with a typical Microsoft workload compared to the FOB average performance of Micron 3400 & 3500 SSDs with similar workloads. Adobe Creative Cloud offer available with some purchases. Contact Crucial for terms and conditions To ensure optimal performance and maintain your T705 SSD’s agreement when installing with an in-motherboard heatsink, you must not remove the copper-clad label.

Related products