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PC Fan of the Future?

baptiste writes "While we marvel at the latest CPU release or new motherboard chipset, we still put the same old fans in the neon lit cases and then complain that it is too loud. Well, maybe someone has finally come up with the next generation PC fan. Y.S. Tech has announced a new fan which is driven at the blade tips by a magnetic motor in the housing. Without the motor in the middle they claim a 30% airflow improvement meaning, potenitally, you could get the same airflow of today's fans at a lower RPM meaning less noise. They also claim the fan tips result in the bulk of fan noise. In this design they are sort of enclosed, reducing noise further. There is also a PDF datasheet available."

25 of 260 comments (clear)

  1. All I can say is by SmittyTheBold · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It's about time! I have seen some fans that apple curved tips and other methods to reduce noise, but this sounds like something that could be even more useful.

    It seems to me that these fans sould also be more reliable. You don't need the axis to be anywhere near as complicated, since all it's doing now is providing a center of rotation. The motor is less likely to burn out, and also runs at a lower speed, which is always a good thing when it comes to longevity of hardware.

    --
    ± 29 dB
    1. Re:All I can say is by MtViewGuy · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I am somewhat surprised that cooling fan designers haven't studied how airplane and submarine propeller blades work and recent design improvements that allow for slower turn speeds without sacrificing the amount of movement of air (or water in the case of submarine propellers).

      By putting in a 10-12 blade fan with a relatively narrow center with advanced fan blade designs, a CPU or system cooling fan could easily run a lower speeds while maintaining the same CFM as airflow as regular cooling fans. Lower speeds means not only less noisy fans, but also lower power consumption, too.

  2. Background by LadyLucky · · Score: 5, Funny
    Im not sure i trust a website with a background like that.

    Euck!

    --
    dominionrd.blogspot.com - Restaurants on
  3. Free Sample by Mattygfunk · · Score: 4, Informative

    Check out their FAQ page for details about how to get a free sample fan for testing and reviewing. The only catch is that you must have a website, and presumably you are meant to post a review on your site.

  4. Finally no center motor! by denzo · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Gads, finally. That's what kills most of the flowrate on these fans, especially the current variety of Y.S. Tech fans. These fans' centers are easily 1.5 inches in diameter, a fairly large area for a static air pocket to sit underneath, right above where the chip die of the CPU is.

    This is why dual-fan HSF setups primarily dominated, especially back when slot CPUs were still popular: you didn't have that static area of air. Sure, you had a hell of a lot more airflow from two fans, but one can argue that a lot of the kinetic energy is lost when air from the two fans collide.

    Either way, this is a great improvement for CPU fans. Bravo, Y.S. Tech, it looks like you're taking the crown back from Delta (which is just more RPM, albeit much more noisy, for better performance).

  5. great! by kaoshin · · Score: 5, Funny

    So with my blinkenlights all taped up, and my fan silent.. I just need a way to find out if my systems are still running.

  6. Trend is positive... by maelstrom · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I wish I could say I was a performance junky (but I can't)... Or rather, I would be one if I could afford to. As it is, I'd rather have a machine that I could tolerate sitting in front of for hours on end.

    A big part of this for me is being able to turn off the MP3's every so often and have enough silence to think! I'd rather have a 500mhz that can do all the development I can throw at it, than a 747 powered fan sitting on top of a Gigahertz!

    Seems that some of these companies are catching on that it might be possible to have the best of both worlds. My hope is that consumers will follow along enough to bring the cost of production low enough that even I can afford them. :)

    --
    The more you know, the less you understand.
  7. I dunno... by colmore · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It seems like every once in a while someone comes up with a latest-greatest new heatsink design. I've seen weird platinum peacock feathers and those wavy metal strips from a while back. They all look kind of goofy, and when really put to the test, don't do too much better. Short of pipes nd pumps, big hunks of copper attached to really fast traditional fans are still the best thing going, and I don't think that's for lack of effort at finding new things.

    Because this is an improvement on the *fan* and not the whole heatsink, I give it a little more credence, but I won't be that interested until I actually see some Tom's numbers on it.

    And I really won't be interested in it until the pricetag falls below $100 for a fan. For that money you could water-cool, or just soundproof your case.

    --
    In Capitalist America, bank robs you!
  8. longer lifespan? by NightHwk1 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Since the motor is located on the outer edges of the fan, would this have any effect on the lifespan of the fan? How about dirt accumulation?

    The main problems I have with my cooling fans are balance, and dirt. When a fan has been running for a long enough time, somehow its balance shifts, and makes horrible loud noises. My server box is located in my closet, on the floor, with plenty of dust getting sucked into the case. It eventually got so bad that it caused the power supply fan to stop moving...
    If this new fan design can overcome or lessen these problems, then I'll buy them as soon as they are available!

    1. Re:longer lifespan? by bani · · Score: 4, Interesting

      It's likely to have a much longer lifespan than your usual center mount motor fan. The bearings will be a LOT simpler, and there should be far less wear. Also, mounting the magnets on the edges means you should get a LOT more torque than a center mount motor. So even when the bearings go wonky, the magnets should still be able to spin the fan.

  9. Who needs a stinking fan!!! by phunhippy · · Score: 5, Funny

    Who needs a fan when you can buy a new Imac from apple thats so quiet and flow-efficent ya dunt even need a stinking loud fan or a quiter one!! and u can run linux on these macs!

    This postsoon to be modded down by humorless people......

  10. Why not make the fans bigger? by phr2 · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Think of the huge, slow-turning ceiling fans in "Casablanca"--well, ok, not that big.

    The point is that airflow increases with rpm times the SQUARE of diameter, which means if you make the fan 2x as big, you can make it 4x slower. The original NeXT boxes used a big, slow-turning fan to keep noise down, and it was quite effective. PC's usually use 3 inch fans but with some case mods could probably be set up with 5 inch fans, which for the same airflow could quiet things down a lot.

    Add to that a hard disk with a fluid bearing spindle motor (pdf) and you've got a rather civilized box on your desk. I'm using one of these drives now (Travelstar 30GN) and the difference between it and an old drive is wonderful. The quietness is like getting rid of a toothache.

  11. Almost all Apples SILENT (Apple 2,Mac+,IIfx,iMac ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Almost all Apples SILENT (Apple 2, Apple 3, Mac+, IIfx, iMac, Cube, iBook, Newton, etc.

    That is almost the main engineering case design criteria and why so many fussy demanding people like artists, musicians, scientists (chemists, biologists) and even programmers continue to support apple products.

    PeeCees are like load aircraft carriers or at least Vaccuum cleaners comapred to the majority of the most popular selling Apple Computers.

    Did you know the Apple 2 had NO FAN at all?

    Same with the Mac Plus... no FAN at all.

    and most all the products since the IIfx have a variable speed fan that increases rotation only if truly needed... like the Wallstreet G3 laptops.

    When Steve jobs created the NeXT workstation he designed every cable to be one long 10 foot single cable so that the machine (almost quiet) could be hidden insode a closet or put very far from your monitor! He hates noise of all kinds.

    Hurray for quiet or semi-quiet hardware.

  12. Pure PR by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    There may be good economic reasons to put the motor parts on the OD of the fan and that is good. But, all statements about the air flow and cooling capabilities are pure PR.

    First, the velocity of the blades near the hub are too slow to put work into the air and therefore the air tends to leak backwards near the hub. This is why putting the motor in the hub area does not degrade fan performance.

    Second, while the fastest parts of the fan (the blade tips) make most of the fan noise, changing their shape does the most to reduce the noise. The noise has nothing to do with the "motor parts" that reside in the blade tips in this design.

    Third, the pressure generated by the fan is solely dependant on the fan design and has nothing to do with how the fan is powered.

    Fourth, of course the torque is more effective at a larger radius, but this has nothing to do with efficiency.

    Fifth, any increase in air flow has to do with the shape of the blades and the speed of the fan and can probably be improved a somewhat by blocking the hub a little.

    Sixth, I do not see how the fan improves the efficiency of cooling anything. Increased air flow will cool anything better, according to how much horsepower do you want to put into your fan. And, it matters a whole lot where the parts to be cooled are in relation to the exit air stream, etc.etc.etc. Nothing but PR here.

    1. Re:Pure PR by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Glad you're not an engineer.

      I thought of this concept a while back, even started modelling it in Simulink (part of Matlab).

      "First, the velocity of the blades near the hub are too slow to put work into the air and therefore the air tends to leak backwards near the hub. This is why putting the motor in the hub area does not degrade fan performance."

      First of all, the hub is smaller, meaning the there is more air intake near the hub...anything which calls for a greater air debit at the top of the fan is good. The air will only 'leak back' if the air pressure under th fan is greater than on top, which doesn't happen until you hit high RPM's. What you will get is vortices under the fan near the hub, which is good...it means a lot of airflow over the die of the chip, which leads to cooling of the chip. Note that this happens under the fan, which is where you do want vortices.

      "Second, while the fastest parts of the fan (the blade tips) make most of the fan noise, changing their shape does the most to reduce the noise. The noise has nothing to do with the "motor parts" that reside in the blade tips in this design."

      The thing is, the tips of the blades are in the ring surrounding the fan...now the air first gets led through a bounding area before it gets spun by the fan...it goes from vertical to horizontal directly, like in any good pump, without having that airflow distorted by the boundary conditions created by the tips of the fan being near but not touching the side of the fan case. Vortices on top of the fan only make for a decrease in airintake which is bad for cooling.

      "Third, the pressure generated by the fan is solely dependant on the fan design and has nothing to do with how the fan is powered."

      But here the method of powering the fan has led to an improvement in fan design (more air intake due to higher area of the fanblades).

      "Fourth, of course the torque is more effective at a larger radius, but this has nothing to do with efficiency."

      Thiuss hasd no bearing on the situation other than stating that the larger a fan is, the better it works...duh, we already knew that.

      "Fifth, any increase in air flow has to do with the shape of the blades and the speed of the fan and can probably be improved a somewhat by blocking the hub a little."

      No, that would only limit the area of air-intake, which is bad...you want a big area of intake, to get as much air down the fan as possible. Blocking the hub is a Bad Idea(tm)

      "Sixth, I do not see how the fan improves the efficiency of cooling anything. Increased air flow will cool anything better, according to how much horsepower do you want to put into your fan. And, it matters a whole lot where the parts to be cooled are in relation to the exit air stream, etc.etc.etc."

      Yeah, you got the idea...this new design improves airflow, which is good!

      Not PR, just airflow...they increase the airintake (by having a smaller hub, which also means better cooling near the centre of the fan) while lowering vortices near the airintake (by having a seamless fancase-fan interface), thus creating better cooling.

  13. some prior discussion by pangloss · · Score: 4, Informative

    this fan has already had some discussion on the various case/cooling forums:

    amdmb

    ars

  14. A cynical viewpoint or insightful? by t0qer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Having torn a many pcâ(TM)s apart, to the risk of slicing my hands upon the un de burred sheet metal. I have noticed 1 common elements that contribute to fan failure.

    Too much heat on the oil seal

    Looking at this compared to a ordinary fan, it looks as though the bearings and oil seals are evenly dispersed over the surface area of the heat sink, where most common fans have the bearings and oil seals right in the center in the middle of rising heat. Iâ(TM)m not a thermodynamics expert but I can tell you from experience that I have been able to bring many a dead CPU fans back from the dead simply by peeling the sticker off in the center and dropping a dab of oil in there.

    Anyways thatâ(TM)s my 2cents

  15. Re:interesting, I thought submersables used this by Uller-RM · · Score: 5, Informative

    Not quite. The caterpillar drive was a gigantic induction pump. Water moves in an electric field, similar to magnetism - generate a large enough field and you can get water moving at a decent pressure. Small induction pumps are fairly common in homebrew watercooling rigs on PCs.

  16. Old but quiet by TotallyBored · · Score: 4, Informative

    For years the huge cooling fans like those on board train locomotives have used a neat trick to keep the noise down. Instead of placing the fan blades at equal angles from each other, they are offset by a small amount. This actually results in a lot MORE noise but it's all outside the human hearing range. The same trick works for small fans as well but no one ever seems to take advantage of it. You basically hear nothing but the motor. (By the way. Does anyone know if there is a manufacturer of these in existence? My computer could definitely use a fan upgrade.)

    --
    "Who is General Failure and why is he reading my disk?"
  17. Email from the manufacturers by MullerMn · · Score: 5, Informative

    I emailed the manufacturers regarding the free tests. Here's what they said:

    Thank you very much for your high interests in Y.S. TECH's revolutionary new product: T.M.D. FAN (Tip-Magnetic Driving Fan).

    After the announcement of the T.M.D. FAN, we have been receiving uncountable inquiries everyday to review the T.M.D. FAN, to obtain the T.M.D. FAN samples and to attain developing schedule. To deal with all of your inquiries and be fair to everyone, here is what Y.S. TECH would like you to follow. We appreciate for your cooperation in advance!

    1. Please visit Y.S. TECH web site at http://www.ystech.com.tw to obtain the detailed information (including technical issues).
    2. We hereby enclose some images (.jpg at 72 dpi) that you are very welcome to apply them to your web site's product review and news announcement.
    3. After your post or announcement of the T.M.D. FAN in your web site, please inform us the links. Then we will deliver physical T.M.D. FAN samples (possibly with heatsink) for your test and review purpose. The samples will be delivered to you in the middle of April.
    4. After your test on the T.M.D. FAN, you will be much appreciated, if you post the test results and comments in your web site. It doesn't matter the results or the comments are positive or negative. The general public needs the truth.

    Here is the rough schedule for the dimensional development of the T.M.D.
    FAN:
    Now: 70x70x15mm is now available. It is targeted for Pentium 4 CPU cooler.
    April: 70x70x15mm T.M.D. FAN will be shipped out to variable locations over the world.
    May to June: 60x60x25mm, 80x80x25mm T.M. FAN will be released to the market. These two dimensions are targeted for AMD CPU cooler and case cooling.

    Again, thank you very much for your interests in T.M.D. FAN!
    Should you have any questions or comments, please feel free to contact us. Y.S. TECH will reply to you as soon as possible.

    Note the "uncountable enquiries.. ;) I wonder why?
    I think their attitude about the reviews is very good. It's a shame more companies aren't like that.

    --
    Andy

  18. Another "Too Cool to Be Useful" cooler by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Another one of those "too cool to be
    useful" cooling fans.
    Center area has minimum effect on air
    transportation. Outside region of blade
    has most effect on air transportation.
    Too sad that blade diamater is redudced
    because "motor" sits outside.

    Heat from chip goes into heat sink. Heat
    sink has very good thermal conductivity
    (Alumininum or copper, much better than
    transition region heat sink -> air). So
    think of heat sink as an ideally stirred
    container. Weak additional middle air
    flow doesn't improve cooling. Reduced
    outside air flow _does_ reduce cooling
    performance.

    What makes an effective cooling device?
    * High surface heat sink with good thermal conductivity.
    * High volume, turbulent of air flow over whole surface.
    * Fancy design does move your money but doesn't move heat.

    1. Re:Another "Too Cool to Be Useful" cooler by denzo · · Score: 4, Insightful
      It's about moving the air better, not faster. If flowrate is all the matters, then we would just stick huge fans on our heatsinks that spin at a bazillion RPM. Overclockers are gravitating towards the whiney Delta fans just because it gives them faster air flow; sure, if you increase flowrate, you'll get more turbulent airflow to force air through the entire heatsink, not leaving any static air "pockets." But is this really the most efficient way to do this? Forcing turbulent air through your heatsink? It comes at the cost of noise, electricity, and fan life. Larger fans aren't really an option, since the 60mm form factor is prevalent in the CPU industry right now and for the forseable future.

      Getting better, more uniform airflow that can circulate the entire heatsink without increasing RPM is the best way to go, and improves performance while reducing noise, per the design at the product page linked from the article.

      And making heatsinks bigger just isn't an option. Yes, more surface area helps, but as you increase the distance of the thermal transfer material (Al or Cu), it's effectiveness drops. Making very thin fins makes much more delicate and expensive heatsinks. There is already a surge of copper heatsinks on the market, and their surface area can't be improved too much because of their mallability (bends easily). Also, with processor dies shrinking, the ability for larger heatsinks to transfer heat from such a small surface area is reduced. The only way to improve upon this is for CPU manufacturers to spread out their die sizes, or reduce heat output with each new stepping, which won't happen because of wafer costs. So much centralized heat on such a small surface area just makes newer heatsink designs pointless.

  19. One thing is for sure... by scorcherer · · Score: 4, Funny
    These new fans really, really suck!

    (air, that is.)

    Which makes them ideal for your WinXP box.

    --

    --
    The Cap is nigh. Time to get a fresh new account.

  20. Re:Almost all Apples SILENT (Apple 2,Mac+,IIfx,iMa by shannara256 · · Score: 4, Informative

    > Did you know the Apple 2 had NO FAN at all?

    Neither does the Tandy 1000 RL I've got sitting over here. So what? They're both old and slow, and neither has the processor power to justify a fan.

  21. Flame exchange. by Erris · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Well well, looks like I've been trolled by two bogus AC's. Well the first made more sense. Let's start with the second's rather ugly start: Glad you're not an engineer.

    He made more sense then you do. You: I thought of this concept a while back, even started modelling it in Simulink (part of Matlab).

    Nice work, drawing pictures lends credibility. Nope. I'm a Mechanical Engineer. I've done some rudimentary fan designs (you know vector diagrams, work balance, that kind of thing), but I won't play a fan designer on TV or stomp reasonable people. Him: "First, the velocity of the blades near the hub are too slow to put work into the air and therefore the air tends to leak backwards near the hub. This is why putting the motor in the hub area does not degrade fan performance."

    You: First of all, the hub is smaller, meaning the there is more air intake near the hub...anything which calls for a greater air debit at the top of the fan is good. The air will only 'leak back' if the air pressure under th fan is greater than on top, which doesn't happen until you hit high RPM's. What you will get is vortices under the fan near the hub, which is good...it means a lot of airflow over the die of the chip, which leads to cooling of the chip. Note that this happens under the fan, which is where you do want vortices.

    He's right, again. If your fan does not give you any pressure increase, you have a poor difuser or a poor fan or both. There is zero motion at the axis. The best thing to do with that air is to redirect it outward towards your blades. If your hub does not do this, you might get some recirculation there that will do what your hub should have. Him again: "Second, while the fastest parts of the fan (the blade tips) make most of the fan noise, changing their shape does the most to reduce the noise. The noise has nothing to do with the "motor parts" that reside in the blade tips in this design."

    You: The thing is, the tips of the blades are in the ring surrounding the fan...now the air first gets led through a bounding area before it gets spun by the fan...it goes from vertical to horizontal directly, like in any good pump, without having that airflow distorted by the boundary conditions created by the tips of the fan being near but not touching the side of the fan case. Vortices on top of the fan only make for a decrease in airintake which is bad for cooling.

    Huh? What does that have to do with what he said about decreasing noise by changing blade shape? Any axial fan will create an axial vortex above it unless you put stator blades in the way. If you want to get rid of the blade tip vorticies you change their shape, or you could put a ring around them but that makes other problems. Him: "Third, the pressure generated by the fan is solely dependant on the fan design and has nothing to do with how the fan is powered."

    You, again: But here the method of powering the fan has led to an improvement in fan design (more air intake due to higher area of the fanblades).

    You are starting to repeat yourself, which would be OK if you were correct or even consistent. You know, he's right again. While you fail to actually contradict him, you do contradict yourself by not bothering to say anything about pressure differences that you don't understand very well. Him: "Fourth, of course the torque is more effective at a larger radius, but this has nothing to do with efficiency."

    You: Thiuss hasd no bearing on the situation other than stating that the larger a fan is, the better it works...duh, we already knew that.

    Ummm, that's not what he said, but it's nice to see that you have the spirit to be condesending. Can you explain why a larger fan works better for us? Is it because the ends may be turning faster? Isn't this why axial turbines are generally rows of blades mounted further away from the axis than they are long? Would they be more efficient with a large hole in the center? Him again: "Fifth, any increase in air flow has to do with the shape of the blades and the speed of the fan and can probably be improved a somewhat by blocking the hub a little."

    You, sigh: No, that would only limit the area of air-intake, which is bad...you want a big area of intake, to get as much air down the fan as possible. Blocking the hub is a Bad Idea(tm)

    Do you know any other tune than, "this thing rocks because it has a smaller hub"? I think I've alrady stated the purpose of the hub. Go figure. Him: "Sixth, I do not see how the fan improves the efficiency of cooling anything. Increased air flow will cool anything better, according to how much horsepower do you want to put into your fan. And, it matters a whole lot where the parts to be cooled are in relation to the exit air stream, etc.etc.etc."

    You: Yeah, you got the idea...this new design improves airflow, which is good!

    Same tune. You know what is good but not how to achieve it. He does. But wait, you have a conclusion: Not PR, just airflow...they increase the airintake (by having a smaller hub, which also means better cooling near the centre of the fan) while lowering vortices near the airintake (by having a seamless fancase-fan interface), thus creating better cooling

    OK. Does anyone have any numbers around here? Like flow vrs current for various radiuses? Yes that would be useful, a repeatable experiment comparing various available designs. The data sheet is slashdotted. Perhaps you can CAD up some drawings of a test bench for us?

    --
    DMCA, Hollings, Palladium. What might have sounded like paranoia is now common sense.