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| | #1 |
| I don't know how to put this, but, I'm kind of a big deal. | MSI will present a live demo of our "Air Power Cooler" concept product in MSI's ECO area block on the MSI booth in CeBIT Hall 21 B34. You will see the electricity-less fan which was powered only by the movement of heat and air, the fan speed will change relative to the chipset temperature. The prototype "Air Power Cooler" is our first attempt to investigate how the Eco concept can work in tandem with the evolution of the mainboard "ECOlution" and joins the theme for MSI at Cebit08. We will continue to co-work with our great partners and try to turn this early concept into mass production in the near future. MSI -- World's First Powerless Air Cooler on a Mainboard! |
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| | #2 |
| oh noes | That's a pretty nifty idea. Looks a little bulky though, but not too bad,I guess. ![]() e8500@4ghz|Asus P5k-e WiFi| 4gb OCZ ReaperX|2x 3870's|1.3tb storage space|MSI tv tuner. |
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| | #3 |
| T-Rex | Haha I saw this yesterday and tought of creating a thread about it, but totally forgot. It's a nice concept if well applied. I'm not too sure it will create enough air to cool a high-end northbridge however. Another problem I saw with the demo board picture is that the fans blows toward the DIMM's, most likely this is going to impede airflow when ram is installed but also that it's going against most if not all case airflow (sucking air in a the front, blowing out at the back). Other than this, like I said if well applied it's a cool concept. Is it really useful, considering how much a chipset fan costs in production and energy, that I'm not sure... |
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| | #4 | |
| Worker Ant Join Date: Apr 2006 Location: New Jersey
Posts: 955
| Quote:
Quad Core Xeon 3210@3.22ghz GA-EP35C-DS3R 460FSB x 7 -- 60mm Delta fan on NB 2x2gb Patriot Viper DDR3-1333 Sapphire 4870 512mb GDDR5 2x Raptor 150 ADFD RAID 0--WD320YS RE 16mb Storage Samsung Super WriteMaster 20x DVDRW X-Fi eXtremeGamer w\Logitech Z-2300 Silverstone OP650 54A 12v Rail @50C DamgerDen Torture Rack--MC-TDX--Black Ice GTX240--MCP355 Rev 2--Swiftech MicroRes-- Tygon 3603 3/8"ID Logitech G5 - Logitech LX-710 wireless KB Vista Ultimate 64 | |
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| | #5 |
| Join Date: May 2006 Location: Rhode Island USA
Posts: 1,716
| Most Stirling engines need to be very hot in order to have any kind of power at all. Coupled with all PLASTIC parts, bearings, gears , etc..I see these coolers failing very very quickly, even from just a tiny bit of dust. I agree with ranger, for how large this thing is, and how complicated it is, it would be cheaper just put a big passive sink, or a smaller active cooler. IMO, this is just away for MSI to charge $10-15 more per board Opteron 64 165--1.5GB DDR--ECS KA1 MVP(thanks HL!)--x1800GTO 256MB--Seagate 320GB SATA--Antec 550 Watt--Antec P180 Last edited by Lead Head; March 2nd, 2008 at 14:31. |
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| | #6 | |
| Colonel Calamity | wow I did not see this thread... I looked before posting too... may as well merge my thread about the same thing into this one... Quote:
now we need one for a CPU with a larger 80-120mm fan ![]() Thanks HL and Corsair! My opinions are my own and not representative of this site or its members. Last edited by screwballl; March 2nd, 2008 at 14:34. | |
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| | #7 |
| Modder-ator | This is an interesting concept, but probably not best suited for computer parts. Any power savings due to this "powerless" fan are going to be completely insignificant compared to what the rest of the system is sucking up. Couple that with the obviously higher price of these (due to complexity), I really don't think we will ever see something like this on the typical, everyday computer motherboard (or processor or GPU for that matter). Props to MSI for being innovative, but this is not the place they need to be marketing it. |
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| | #8 |
| HL's Technomancer | Like that little fragile plastic fan can generate any kind of air pressure unless it's spinning at around 5,000RPMs. Also pointed the wrong way, lets move what heat we can onto the RAM... |
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| | #9 |
| I'm Diggin it! | I nominate this for the "Most interesting Post of the month" award. Very, very interesting concept there. Q6600@ 3.2GHz w/ CNPS9700 | EVGA 780i | 2Gb Corsair DDR2-800 | EVGA GTX 280 1Gb Video | 1x WD 640Gb HDD, 2x Seagate 400Gb HDD, 1x250Gb WD | 2x Samsung SH-203B Opticals | Antec 900 | ABS/Tagan BZ700 700W PSU |
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| | #10 |
| Worker Ant Join Date: Apr 2006 Location: New Jersey
Posts: 955
| Like blake said, the amount of power a chipset fan uses is like 2-3w max. It's a reason to charge more for a MB. This concept has its place in the world but it's not on a motherboard. Quad Core Xeon 3210@3.22ghz GA-EP35C-DS3R 460FSB x 7 -- 60mm Delta fan on NB 2x2gb Patriot Viper DDR3-1333 Sapphire 4870 512mb GDDR5 2x Raptor 150 ADFD RAID 0--WD320YS RE 16mb Storage Samsung Super WriteMaster 20x DVDRW X-Fi eXtremeGamer w\Logitech Z-2300 Silverstone OP650 54A 12v Rail @50C DamgerDen Torture Rack--MC-TDX--Black Ice GTX240--MCP355 Rev 2--Swiftech MicroRes-- Tygon 3603 3/8"ID Logitech G5 - Logitech LX-710 wireless KB Vista Ultimate 64 |
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