Read more.Danamics' much-vaunted liquid metal-based CPU cooler has arrived in stores, but at over £200, who's going to buy one?
Read more.Danamics' much-vaunted liquid metal-based CPU cooler has arrived in stores, but at over £200, who's going to buy one?
Er.. they're still constrained by the laws of thermodynamics like the rest of us. So what if you have the most efficent way of getting heat into your fins? The fin/air gradient is still going to be the limiting factor - more so when it doesn't even come with a fan.
I'm thinking of a 2 word phrase... one of these words is 'off'...
seriously... it would probably be cheaper to water cool your cpu tha buy this... and the water cooling is more than likely going to be better...
plus given the choice between one of those and the i7... i'd take the i7...
with that price did they manage to come up with some other numbers also? i.e figures. I'm interested to see.
completely pointless
Good to see my watercooling setup was a worthy investment
*Phew*
So are Hexus getting one to test? If you do what are you going to test it against in terms of water cooling?
I don't think it's targeted as a replacement for water cooling, even if it's marketed as such. I think it's more of an alternative for those who want very good cooling, yet don't/can't have the kerfuffle of a water-cooling setup.
It's still going to sell in trickles at best, regardless of who it is or isn't aimed at.
I should hope so at that priceOriginally Posted by Danamics
Except that it's still marketing fud because they haven't said what they consider "most watercoolers" to be, and there is a possibility they mean a setup that conveniently has a radiator with a smaller surface area...
Does it come with magic beans?
Yes, you eat some before entering the store and end up buying a half-dozen of these.
But as someone else mentioned, will this magnetic pump affect your hard drive array?
I cant imagine what would happen if it were to somehow break open. Mercury (or whatever it is) all over your everything.
P.S. If if is some form of mercury, couldn't it freeze at low temperatures meaning that one part could be frozen and blocking the flow while the processor is overheating?
It will not freeze as long as the is a heat source applied (ie the CPU) it will be generating enough heat to keep it all liquid and if its not then the solid metal in the pipes will still conduct sufficient heat to the fins to keep the CPU cool until the metal liquefies again. But seriously when was the last time your room was less than 0°C? and even at those temps Mercury wouldn't freeze (it freezes/melts at ~-39°C) Now since we don't know what the liquid metal is we can't say for sure what its properties are but I would be very surprised if it would ever freeze under normal operating conditions.
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