Zalman TNN 500A - Complete Heatpipe Cooled Case 259
SlashCrunchPop writes "Zalman is about to release a completely fanless computer case based entirely on heatpipe cooling capable of keeping even the hottest CPUs cool. Cool silence, at last?" The article's in German, but the pictures speak for themselves.
Excellent (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Excellent (Score:4, Interesting)
Or maybe it's just me....I mean, I am the one who moved right beside an expressway because I liked the dull sounds that come from cars rushing past while I am falling asleep.
Re:Excellent (Score:2)
Uber Sweet!! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Uber Sweet!! (Score:4, Informative)
It does look like a giant heat seak, though. I wonder how hot the case itself gets.
Heat Pipes 101 (Score:5, Informative)
Case Details (Score:5, Informative)
PDF specsheet on the case => http://www.sharkacorp.com/pdf/TNN500A_Catalog.pdf [sharkacorp.com]
Re:Heat Pipes 101 (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Heat Pipes 101 (Score:2)
Re:Heat Pipes 101 (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Heat Pipes 101 (Score:2)
Why is his hand getting hot? Because the gas is converted back to a liquid. The excess heat goes straight into his had, hence why water vapor is always a worse burn than boiling liquid.
He just needs a little nudge on thermodynamics...
Re:Heat Pipes 101 (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Heat Pipes 101 (Score:5, Informative)
It is closed as in there is no coolant exposed - a closed loop. Much like your car system or your home airconditioning is considered a closed system.
Welcome to the real world and not your thermodynamics class boys and girls.
Re:Heat Pipes 101 (Score:5, Informative)
Closed system: no exchange on particles. Isolated system: no exchange of particles or energy.
It is correct to call this system a closed one. The water molecules inside the tube transfer energy in and out of the system via evaporation and condensation (+natural conduction through the pipe material) as long as one end of the tube is at a higher temperature than the other.
As far as the transient times are concerned, you're right in that thermodynamics does not deal with equilibration times. Why? Because it is a theory of systems in equilibrium. And of course there is a delay. Nothing in nature is instantaneous.
Re:nothing in nature is instataneous? (Score:3, Informative)
In context with the post to which you are replying, "instant" would mean zero delay from one event to the next, that is, zero fractions of a second.
If there is a delay, any delay, even the tiniest fraction of a second, then it's not instantaneous. Maybe it's "almost instantaneous".
I realize that I am straying somewhat off topic here, but to give an example, the memory modules that I design, simulate a
Re:Heat Pipes 101 (Score:3, Informative)
Maybe... (Score:5, Funny)
> The article's in German, but the pictures speak for themselves.
Maybe it's like the SCO comments, and someone can translate it by substituting English letters for the German ones.
Re:Maybe... (Score:2)
Time For BabelFish (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Time For BabelFish (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Time For BabelFish (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Time For BabelFish (Score:2)
Googlized [tinyurl.com]
Babeltry (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Babeltry (Score:5, Informative)
The author needs to get out more. A lot more. In fact, he shouldn't be allowed indoors until he's had a cold shower.
Re:Babeltry (Score:2)
* This is an educated guess
Re:Babeltry (Score:2)
"Which one is to there still say, a piece of cream of the superlative. There I get damp eyes."
Re:Babeltry (Score:2)
"What more is there to say, a collection of superlatives, makes me want to cry."
Or something in this direction, the Babelfish isn't soo bad actually. Sahne is literally cream, but sometimes, like here, used to mean only "excellent"
Re:Babeltry (Score:3, Informative)
Complete manual translation (Score:5, Informative)
Zalman fan-less PC
Preamble:
Finally, never-ending silence in the box. It took a long time for a product like this to be produced for the mass market. The manufacturer likely will be swamped by the large number of pre-orders. While its technical specs already convince us on paper, we are waiting for the first samples and pricing information. But one thing should be clear right away: The price will be way below any self-made constructions, since Zalman is known to specialize on uncompromising mass production. 6 heat pipes for the CPU and two more for the graphics card, as well as 10 for the hard disk should keep the system optimally cool. Let's look forward to it, and start saying good-bye to all these fans and noise makers right now. I hope it's christmas soon
Well, what more can I say, the cream of the crop. It brings tears to my eyes. More heat pipes (18 of them!!) and cooling elements than you ever wanted.
Silence in its perfected form, since this is a completely closed case. The first PC case where also optical drives can be de-coupled and their noise dampened.
More is not technically feasible!
More silent is not possible!
From october on, this case will be available at www.alternate.de
So, start saving now!
And of course, I'll keep at it. (I guess the author means he'll post updates)
More silent is not possible? (Score:2)
What? Nothing for the power supply? It's hardly worth silencing the cpu fan when the biggest, noisiest fan is still whirring away.
You may check here for Building Silent PC's (Score:4, Informative)
Re:You may check here for Building Silent PC's (Score:2, Informative)
The parent site of that thread, I think is more informative.
http://www.silentpcreview.com/
Re:You may check here for Building Silent PC's (Score:2, Informative)
Not the case for me. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Not the case for me. (Score:2)
Solid Copper pipes??? (Score:3, Interesting)
They aren't Solid Copper (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Solid Copper pipes??? (Score:4, Informative)
I also used to have a pipe bender which is a curved form with a gully to take the pipe. A long handle attached to a roller bends the pipe in the gully. It is easy to make a form like this using ply wood. Get 2 sheets of thick strong ply about 6 inches square and a sheet of strong ply the same thickness as the pipe you wish to bend. Use a jigsaw to cut the curve you want into the pipe sized piece of ply and clamp it between the 2 squares using g-clamps. Bend the pipe using the form and finish of freehand to make any fine changes after. As long as any major bends are made using the form any small adjustments should not cause the pipe to collapse.
The tools that you really need to buy are for creating the unions on the ends. Olives are OK but flares are better.
That would not be useful with these small pipes. I used to have a pipe
Re:Solid Copper pipes??? (Score:2)
Heat pipre do not work with a pump and a reservoir, this is basic Water cooling you are referencing.
Eat pipe work by having a copper tube with its inner surface having a thin membrane of stuff wich I can't remeber the word for (I'm not an english speaker...). Well when one end of the tube is heated, the liquid passes thru the membrane and gets to its gazeous form, gathering energy with it. It then moves to the cooler section of
The best thing is... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:The best thing is... (Score:5, Funny)
Is it really German? (Score:2)
Anybody know different?
Looks cool, but... (Score:5, Insightful)
Air cooling still has plenty of mileage - bigger fans at lower rpm are what we need. I have two 120mm case fans running through a rheostat, and the noise is insignificant compared to the little 60mm CPU fan (no, it's not even a Delta).
Re:Looks cool, but... (Score:5, Informative)
But they won't get old. Manufacturers and tests show that a relatively small (10K) increase in temperature can significantly decrease a drive's lifetime. There's not much needed to keep a consumer drive cool, though. A low-noise fan (80mm, 1500RPM) keeps the temperature of my drives so low that they don't feel warm to the touch while they get quite toasty without the airflow.
Those are heat-pipes (Score:3, Insightful)
IDE drives may not need individual coolers, but they definitely like significant airflow. As there isn't a fan, you need to be sure that they don't cook or cook anything else in the cab.
As for airflow inside the case, yes there is still some because of convection. The air
Goes around, comes around (Score:4, Interesting)
Reminds me of the high power PSUs we were building back in the early-80s for I-can't-tell-you-about-that applications. That was for 60V 50A DC-audio amplifiers. Why do Germans still go for all-black, finned military chic?
Even so, the limited convection of this thing is still wasted capacity. It would be better, and almost as quiet, to have a chimney round the back with the fins pointing inward, and a slow air stream from a large fan being sent up it. It could easily be as quiet as a hard drive.
Re:Goes around, comes around (Score:2)
But the whole point is not to have a fan.
Re:Goes around, comes around (Score:3, Interesting)
They don't. They usually go for pointless boring standard looking 'safeside' designs. In allmost every german household you'll find white-painted standard rough-texture wallpaper, for instance.
It's actually all 'anti-design'. They only thing you can be shure of is that the german thing will allways be 3 mm thicker than all the rest. Check out german car chassis or german cups, saucers and dishes to see what I mean.
Considering that, this case is q
Re:Goes around, comes around (Score:5, Informative)
Bauhaus... (Score:2)
Re:Goes around, comes around (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Goes around, comes around (Score:2, Insightful)
are you talking about the inside or the outside?
I woulda thought they go for black in the inside because its a better conductor of heat.
Re:Goes around, comes around (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Goes around, comes around (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Goes around, comes around (Score:2)
But wait... (Score:3, Funny)
Meassurements, Price? (Score:3, Interesting)
What does it cost?
If both is under my maximum I want one!
Re:Meassurements, Price? (Score:5, Informative)
$1,000(US) [zalman.co.kr]
"Does it fit under my Desk?"
Dimensions: 400(L) x 286(W) x 607(H) mm [windys.com.br]
Re:Meassurements, Price? (Score:2)
If you haven't seen the Zalman Flower, google for it, it's pretty cool. Basically, it's just a monstrous and fine veined heat sink.
They do a lot of acrobatics to make it fit in a case though and that's where we part ways. Personally I stopped using cases altogether a while back. I just use racks with the components layin
Rough translation, hopefully better than babelfish (Score:5, Informative)
Finally, it's told to us [uhm "(un)endliche Ruhe im Karton" means so much more though
Off coarse I'll try to inform you about this in the future [ "Ja naturlich bleibe ich am Ball
What's more to say about this thing, only creme de la creme superlatives will suffice. It makes you feel all soddy inside [ "Da bekomme ich feuchte Augen"]. Heatpipes (18 !!), and more heatdispensers than you will probably need.
It will be perfected silence because the case is fully sealed. It's the first one where even optical drives will be decoupled from the case.
Better is not possible!
More silent is not possible!
Due to be sold in october at
www.alternate.de
Maybe you should start saving money."
Some translation clarification (Score:3, Informative)
[uhm "(un)endliche Ruhe im Karton" means so much more though
This refers to "peace/quiet [Ruhe] in the case/box".
[ "Ja naturlich bleibe ich am Ball
"Naturally I remain on the ball" - "On the ball" is a colloquialism that means "attentive" or "vigilant".
It makes you feel all soddy inside [ "Da bekomme ich feuchte Augen"].
"My eyes [Augen] get moist", i.e. "I am emotionally/spritually moved".
Save enery (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Save enery (Score:3, Flamebait)
If you don't like this, I suggest you move back to Pentium MMX 200-266, or
Re:Save enery (Score:3, Insightful)
Well, I have a PIII 600, an AMD Athlon XP 1900+ and a 19" Sony monitor running on a single UPS. It claims that there's only a 350 watt draw on it when everything is on and functioning. So, I think your numbers are a bit high.
T
Re:Save enery (Score:3, Insightful)
Hint: The big box on your floor is not your "CPU". A modern CPU migth use 50 to 100W. There is no CPU in existence that consumes 300 to 450 watts like you claim.
Re:Save enery (Score:2)
Re:Save enery (Score:3, Informative)
Some examples:
Re:Save enery (Score:3, Informative)
Ignorant? Hmmmmm, very mature of you to say so. But anyway, we've all been a teenager:
As has been mentioned you are off by an order of magnitude. I have a german widget which actually measures the wattage going through a plug. My nForce computer with Athlon XP2100+ uses in total 100Watts under full load and something like 95Watts when idling (which surprised me). My nForce2 with o/ced Athlon XP2400+ uses 150Watts under full load and again no less than 140Watts when idling
Heat exchanger. (Score:2, Interesting)
*apartment was gas heated.
Re:Heat exchanger. (Score:2)
A Question (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:A Question (Score:2, Informative)
21Kg (46 lbs.)
English (Score:5, Informative)
Zalman TNN 500A - Complete Heatpipe Cooled Case [warp2search.net]
From Zalman's site:
Re:English (Score:2)
Marketing Material.jpg [windys.com.br]
high res images
http://www.ask-corp.jp/pic/zalman/tnn500a-3.jpg [ask-corp.jp]
http://www.ask-corp.jp/pic/zalman/tnn500a-2.jpg [ask-corp.jp]
http://www.ask-corp.jp/pic/zalman/tnn500a-1.jpg [ask-corp.jp]
Re:English (Score:4, Interesting)
For that much money, you could go for a full water cooling system with one or two large 120mm fans. Careful selection of the fans would make it very nearly silent, certainly below the noise level of my bedroon during the day, which just off a main road.
The Zalman case looks really impractical too, I mean the back has a door which you would need to keep open if all your cables didn't fit though the exit holes at the bottom. It's gotta be a niche market thing.
MoJo
Ugly... (Score:2)
More info in English (Score:4, Informative)
http://www.sharkacorp.com/pdf/TNN500A_Catalog.pdf [sharkacorp.com]
RedShirt
Hmm (Score:3, Interesting)
Sorry, dude. I don't understand german pictures either.
Anyway, that's one big-ass heatsink. The think is.With a chassis like that , you'll probably end up just spreading the heat through your entire case instead of directing heat away from CPU, HD etc. I don't mind the noise. I'll keep my fans thank you.
Market Target (Score:3, Insightful)
Then you're not exactly the target market for this case, are you?
Virg
Brilliant! Looks like I can junk some gear (Score:3, Interesting)
Publish your ultra-short tales at espresso stories [espressostories.com].
Okay, but damn its ugly. (Score:2, Funny)
Misleading Article (Score:3, Insightful)
Let's see, where are the fans inside a normal PC? On the case sure. But also in the PSU, on the motherboard, and on the graphics card.
Now maybe they have solutions for these, but this invariably means ripping off the supplied fans to fit the new heat pipes etc., thus completely voiding your warranties on those items. And if you just paid 400 bucks for the latest graphics card (which is by far the noisiest component in my current system), you might not want to do that!
So, while I certainly applaud any step forward in the quest for silence, the case on its own is by no means the end of it.
Re:Misleading Article (Score:2)
Come on now... No new technology comes out, being supported by every compatible device on the planet.
If you aren't willing to void your warranty (and don't know how to put a decent fan on your video card), that doesn't mean the rest of the world is doomed to live in a world of computer-fan noise.
Makes sense only if seriously upgradable (Score:3, Insightful)
For notebooks, this looks like a good technology: notebooks cost more anyhow and you can't really stick them away in a room somewhere. Plus, most notebooks really suffer from heating issues, and an on-off fan tends to be more annoying than a constant hum.
But best of all would be a way to turn excess heat back into power. Heatpumps of some kind?
BabelFish translation (Score:2)
underwater PC? (Score:2, Interesting)
Instead of blowing air around, putting hoses in your computer or using heat-pipes, would it be possible to submerge the whole motherboard and hard-drive in some non-electricity-conducting liquid? De-ionized water???
Michael.
Re:underwater PC? (Score:2, Interesting)
Fanless = dust free? (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm sure inhaling the dust that collects in computer cases is a health hazard, if you do it often enough.
Wolf in Giraffes Clothing (Score:2, Informative)
The surface area of the pipe is significantly diminished compared to other similarly designed systems. This leads me to believe that there will be much more "air heat". Fortunately, this shouldn't affect the circuitry.
Another difference I picked up on immediately is the use of motor oil
Apple PowerMac (Score:3, Insightful)
Check out the new Apple G5's cooling system [apple.com]. It uses a ton of ultra-quiet fans instead, moving high-volume low-speed air over the components. It puts out 35dbA, which is less than even a fairly quiet laptop fan these days.
Now, admittedly the cooling technology isn't as creative, but considering that for $670 more than the estimated cost of the case alone here, you get a nice IBM 970 processor, hard-drive, OSX, and a lot of other goodies, that's really not a bad trade-off.
And yes, I took the high end of the estimated case cost ($1100) and the cheapest G5 ($1770). But still.
And the heat goes...where? (Score:2)
Re:And the heat goes...where? (Score:2)
Exactly. And the point is that using heatpipes or other fancy cooling technologies does not get around this problem at all. The existence of such cooling technologies is not an excuse for constantly i
Amazingly ugly (Score:2)
Wow, that is the ugliest case I have seen in years. It doesn't even have a nice, clean industrial look. It's just ugly, really really ugly. Oh well, maybe I can hide it behind a wall or in a closet. But wait! if I do that, why would I care that it's fanless? :P
Googl Translation (Score:2)
Zalman exhaustless PC
Preface:
Finally, infinite peace in the cardboard. It has for a long time to finally such a product in the mass-market appears lasted. The manufacturer will be able itself to hardly save from the many vorbestellungen. On the paper convincingly we wait technically already now on the first samples and price information. One might be now already clear however, the price far below all self's building Konstruktiuonen will lie, since Zalman is specialized in absolute m
Re:What's the point? (Score:4, Interesting)
The point is that your $20 dollar case probably sounds like a jet plane taking off, possibly overheats occassionally, and if a fan fails you're screwed. This one doesn't have those problems.
These also look a lot, um, cooler. In an ugly-modern kind of way.
Re:What's the point? (Score:2)
there was some japanese(? can't remember) guy who made his own(thick copper as heat pipes rather than real heatpipes) solution kind of like this(passive fanless, non watercooled).
now if i only won at the lottery..
Re:What's the point? (Score:2, Informative)
You can achieve a quiet PC for much less cash. I bought:
A Big HSF with 80mm temp controlled fan (normally runs at 200rpm).
A Fortron PSU with 120mm fan.
2 temp controlled case fans which run at 1300rpm
For about $100 you can make your machine so quiet you can barely tell it's on.
More info [silentpcreview.com]
Re:What's the point? (Score:3)
Re:Idea (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Leaks... (Score:4, Informative)