Eliminating SSD Command Conflicts Triggered by High-Load Ray Tracing
Extreme thermal accumulation under high loads leads to micro-shifts in electrical signals. Looking at my physical report 2025-HDD-04, when ambient temps hit 80°C-85°C with a peak of 92°C, HWinfo monitoring detected asymmetric read-timing offsets of 10ms-15ms. I tackled this by entering the Control Panel and running a full system scan using the official Microsoft Runtime Repair tool, while manually flushing 2.1GB-3.4GB of corrupted temporary image files. After a reboot, a second HWinfo check showed read timings returning to a tight 0.1ms-0.5ms window, and the sensor stopped logging any critical errors. Even though the crashing and visual glitchy bits are gone, the drive temperature stays quite high during extended play. This proves that if your anemic heatsink isn't cutting it, you might still experience physical thermal-induced latency peaks over time, keeping the experience from being truly seamless.