Christophe,
I got your PM and will get you that file by email this evening, plus also the exact temps. Mine are running a bit cooler than yours but perhaps that is because mine are 240 GB.
The driver is in that page you link.... go to that page, go to the section "Driver-Storage (12)" and in there download the 6th one down.... 9.6.0.1014. That gets you SP65107. Once you have that on your desktop then run it and it will create a folder called SWSetup on the root level of your C drive. I cancel out of it before allowing it to do any real installing of anything, and it may ask if it installed properly.... answer Yes. Then go into C drive and find that folder and in it will be a SP65107 folder. Early in the "unpacking" it may detect that a more recent driver already installed... say Yes to continue, but when you finally get to the first official looking Intel install page ("Welcome to the Setup Program") choose Cancel and Yes to whether you really want to exit.
That all is to get the 64-bit drivers unpacked and where you can find them. Go into that SP65107 folder in the SWSetup folder in root C and copy out the f6flpy-64.zip folder to your desktop. Now extract that zip so you now also have a f6flpy-x64 folder unzipped on your desktop. Here is where it can get a bit tricky.
You need to know how to update drivers from within Device Manager. You should read up a bit on that first. In this process you want to check the box to include subfolders. The process usually is pretty automatic, and you need to use the Browse option to navigate to that f6flpy-x64 unzipped folder as the target of the update process. Then click on OK and Next.
However, if your current drivers are newer than these 9.6.0.1014 the process will not want to proceed, and the trick is to delete those newer drivers including checking the box to truly delete them from the driver repository. Then the OS will reboot, and pick out the next older set of drivers from its repository and install them, and likely require another reboot. Try again.... it may be that the next older set still was newer than the 9.6.0.1014 set. Regardless you'll be able to install those good ones through this process without installing a bunch of unnecessary RAID software.
If you happen to navigate too deeply into that f6flpy-x86 folder the initialization file you want to choose is iaStor.inf, not iaAHCI.inf. That should not happen, however, if you check the box to include subfolders. Either way, however, you will end up with the same thing assuming your OS was initially set up while SATA emulation in BIOS was set to RAID + AHCI.
Then a restart and then you can check to confirm you have the OS running on those correct older drivers that work with the Predator via Device Manager.