High End Silent Cooling For Graphics Cards
SpinnerBait writes "With all the competition these days in the 3D Accelerator market, Graphics
Card OEMs are doing anything they can to differentiate their products in a sea
of competitive solutions. Recently board designs are getting even more
exotic, with brightly colored PCBs, high end heat sink and fan combinations and
even flashing lights for the case modders out there. However, a relatively
new trend is Quiet Computing.
HotHardware has an article up that showcases two new Radeon 9600 Pro and 9800
Pro cards from Sapphire Tech, that have rather impressive fanless coolers on
them that are virtually silent. Great stuff for those of you gaming in the
library."
I must be the only one out there but instead of the fancy packaging, colored circuit bords, flashing lights, included CD's filled with shareware games, and ... as of this article ... cooling devices fit for the Red October, I would like a graphics card that ...
IS IN EXPENSIVE!
Imagine that graphics card marketing departments. Keep your fluff and give me a lower cost card!
Of other note, a card shardard for laptops so I could upgrade my PowerBook G4 would be huge for me, expecially as laptops become the PC of choice for the younger, more mobile 20 somethings.
I only came here to do two things; kick some ass, and drink some beer...looks like we're almost out of beer.
Plus the formfactor makes me wonder exactly where you're supposed to put this damned thing. Might as well get over putting this in anything smaller than an ATX board.
Ignore the "p2p is theft" trolls, they're just uninformed
Now i noticed that the 9800 Pro is so big, considering the size of the heat sink to disperse the heat generated, users would have to give up the adjacent PCI slot.
:P
I always thought in some computers the AGP slot and the 1st PCI slot had a shared IRQ, so this wouldn't be an issue...unless im mistaken, of course
Join the TWIT army now!
With games being so noisy these days eg Command and Conquer, Quake etc - the noise of a fan on the graphics card hardly makes a difference! It'd be less fun playing them in silence....
Video Game cheats, hints a
nothing like feeding hits to another boring hardware review.... yes, there are heatpipes, no doubt mfgr's wills start to use them....
old and boring news, move along people...
I could already have told you that pipe technology greatly enhances enjoyment of the pretty colors and swirly lights so common in today's high-end games.
In Soviet Rush, today's Tom Sawyer gets high on you.
...because my graphics card is louder than my sound card at the moment! :)
I think that NVidia were actually on the right track by blowing out the GPU heat into the outside air rather than into the case. Of course, their fan was a monster, but I imagine that this could be done better with a cooler GPU like ATI's.
..fanless coolers on them that are virtually silent..
;-)
Care to explain how graphic cards with no fans, no moving parts at all are virtually silent? The cooling solution is totally passive, and thus makes no noice at all.. if it does, something went very, very wrong and it's probably the sound of the heavy cooling solution breaking your motherboard or graphic card
"passive heatsinks with heat-pipes"
Just like cpu's in laptops have had since...forever.
Does anyone know how long the typical lifespan of such a heatsink is? Would it survive longer than a typical fan-based heatsink?
I run my boxes 24x7 and it seems that in a dusty environment - such as my appartment - all fans need to be replaced every year or so.
This liquid-in-a-pipe concept seems like it might be a solution for my problem.
No big news. All they did was take a Zalman vga cooler and package it with the card.
The only thing that really makes this significant, is that if it comes with the card you can't void your warranty by placing something "too heavy" on it.
I've been sleeping next to noisy computers for most of my life. Back in the BBS era I'd have things download overnight, so I'm rather used to to all the noise. But if I was overly concerned with the noise, I wouldn't really care about the vid. card. There are much noisier components in a system, mainly the powersupply and some hard drives can be quite loud. People are now installing two or three case fans as well, adding to the cunundrum. I really don't think that adding one more noisy object to the mix would change things.
I know that some people spend their fortunes on quiet powersupplies and sound insulation and these cards might be what they're looking for, but for the most part they're a small nieche market.
-I DDoSed your mom.
Slashdotters love to make fun of soccer moms driving big, fuel wasting SUVs, then these same people go out and get monster graphics cards that need crazy cooling nonsense. In all honesty, maybe we've crossed the line here? The little benefit these cards are resulting in (remember, 98% of all games still aren't making use of pixel shaders) is not worth all of the energy waste, not to mention all the wasted materials that go into heat sinks and heat pipes and all of that.
$69 - RADEON 9100 128MB
$61 - RADEON 9100 64MB
$74 - RADEON 9000 Pro 128MB
$67 - RADEON 9000 Pro 64MB
$46 - RADEON 9000
$61 - RADEON 9000 128MB
$46 - RADEON 9000 64MB
$64 - RADEON 8500
$40 - RADEON 7500
$55 - RADEON 7500 128MB
$30 - RADEON 7000
$59 - RADEON 64MB DDR VIVO
$30 - RADEON 32MB DDR
The lameness filter thinks, I should add some more . But I think the list above about covers it. Apparently There's still more to type so here goes:
water cooling? It is becoming more popular and I can only imagine prices will start to become more reasonable. Completely silent, and more effective than fans/heatsinks; what more could you ask for?
It should be noted that the same coolers have been available from Zalman for some time. That they're now packaged from the factory with this cards should hardly be newsworthy.
First of all the GPU cooler in use is similar in technology to the heat sink used in Shuttle systems. Furthmore while this GPU cooler has low noise levels it takes up a lot of space it seems, blocking at least one PCI slot. This was a problem for a lot of people who saw the GeForce FX series of heat sinks for the first time. So I find it funny if ATI card holders did not care or something. But yeah the worst thing you have to worry about as far as noise is your power supply. My Asus FX card is damn near unregconizable comapred to my CPU Heatsink (its the loudest thing at 31 dcp) So sucks to you.
When I was a kid my mother used to tell me that silence is golden. I hated to hear those words then. Now I know that she was right.
I am bloody sick of loud ass hard drives and fans and everything else. The fans are no big deal but the hard drives are the real problem.
I've yet to see a hard drive that doesn't scream like a small dog in pain. That noise goes through your head like a bayonet.
I'm building a huge cabinet to put *ALL* of my equipment in made out of an old soda water cooler from a drive in store. It's sound proof and thermally it will keep the heat in so I can duct it out through the ceiling, thus keeping the computer room cool and saving money on the AC cooling bill. It gets damn hot with all the PC's and laserjets and stuff running..
Let's get some quiet hard drives too folks..
I'm really sick of noisy machines. I'd even like to have a silent fridge if they make one..
Shouldn't the price come down if they remove the fan instead of sacrificing performance and reliability whilst keeping the price the same and calling it a feature.
They are using a heatsink?
Um... yeah.
I'm going back to bed, wake me if anything worth knowing happens.
I live in a giant bucket.
In competing for the x-box, ati cancelled all support for linux.
Shit company, shit people, shit product
I dig the loud PC. I start the thing up and it sounds like one of those backpack leaf blowers.
Appended to the end of comments you post. 120 chars.
The sound was driving me crazy one day so I got out the hacksaw.
Just take any old stock AMD or P4 heatsink and chop it in half. I didn't have proper heatsink fasteners on my card so drilled it out and zip tied it down. The bottom is still smooth and the paste was properly applied.
The only problem was getting the stock fan off as it was glued on. I put my card in a ziplock bag
and chucked it in the freezer for half an hour. Then I used a screwdriver to pry off the fan assembly (with an old library card to protect the pcb).
Check it out (it's not a swiss watch but it gets the job done).
Pic 1: http://fullcircletraining.com/images/quiet1.jpg
Pic 2: http://fullcircletraining.com/images/quiet2.jpg
You can see I did the same thing to the northbridge on the motherboard.
happy modding.
j.
Huh... virtually silent? Maybe it's just me, but I don't see how a large block of aluminum can be anything more than completely silent. ;)
The other issue we are going to be having is fan reliability. In servers, we can tell if fans go bad through notification. However, when the fan on my GeForceTi gave up the ghost last week, I only knew about it because I was in the case adding a card. With the proliferation of fans in computers, I would like to see either 1) built in software checks to identify fan status, or 2) more efficient passive cooling techniques that don't require fans. Having a truly silent PC on your desk is pretty nice as illustrated by the Apple Cube connected to a flat panel. Totally silent as opposed to my other workstations (Apple included).
Visit Jonesblog and say hello.
I would pay to see this: some guy playing a fps on a machine in the library, using headphones for sound ... he gets fragged, and foretting where he is (and without warning to anyone around him), bellows "FUCK!!!!!!!!" at the top of his lungs.
Toronto-area transit rider? Rate your ride.
When are these things going to require something like water or peltier cooling? The Radeon9700/9800 and GF-FX5800/5900 already exceed the AGP3.0 spec for power consumption and require a direct connection from the power supply. Radeon 9700: 54W, GF-FX 5800: 74W.
The FX-5900 must use less power since they were able to ditch the giant cooler.
Any idea on the type of power consumption that would mandate something beyond air cooling?
Whenever the offence inspires less horror than the punishment, the rigour of penal law is obliged to give way...
This is a perfectly valid question. How is it Offtopic?
I too am left wondering what sort of noise this card generates. I had expected a heatsink without a fan to be completely silent. Why is this "virtually silent"?
I wonder what these casemodders are going to do for lifestyle status symbolism when personal computing devices finally shrink out of sight over the next decade? Paint their smartcards with glow-in-the-dark paint? Have the OLED display woven into the back of their shirt display the SETI@Home screensaver with a message like "345,000 work units complete, beeyatches!"?
--
Power to the Peaceful
98% of all games still aren't making use of pixel shaders
And 80% of games are in 2 dimensions. What's your point?
I realize this statistic is fictitious and was hastily pulled from my ass; so was yours.
Most PC applications don't require much more than a 300 MHz CPU and 96 MB of system RAM. What's your point?
HDTV is being pushed as a standard but most people don't even have S-Video inputs on their televisions. What's your point?
Some people like technology. Some people like quality better, speed faster, and they want it to be quiet. Sure, these things may chug 50-60W (arbitrary figure, it's probably much, much lower) when they're in use playing a 3D game, but people don't 3D game to to and from work every day.
And is it really "wasted"? There's a noticeable and beneficial effect. It is by no means the same as driving an SUV alone using the rear cargo area to haul groceries and your daughter's broken bicycle.
Additionally, you're ignoring the other aspects of SUVs which make them infeasible as car replacements, such as the high rollover rate, the tendency of SUVs to "trip" when hitting small animals such as foxes on the road, or sometimes when the pavement so much as changes texture. SUVs are also regulated as "light trucks" so that they don't have to conform to the same federal safety regulations as normal vehicles. This is due to lobbying on the part of SUV manufacturers, and consumers still buy these deathtraps at premium prices despite how little effort went into making them safe.
The gas consumption and wastefulness of SUVs are only the tip of the iceberg.
Besides, you're ignoring the fact that it's a matter of adoption, and scale which determines waste -- you didn't see us yammering about SUVs much when 15000 people drove them because they weren't popular enough to cause a problem.
When my system is running hot, I'll toss a couple of ice cubes onto my video card.
Totally silent.
Usually then my system crashes and goes down for a day or so and during that time it almost never overheats.
Pretty efficient if you ask me.
There are some odd things afoot now, in the Villa Straylight.
But that's the thing! The case itself is easy to cool quietly - the case is the only place where you can use as large fans as you want. Larger fans == more airflow for the RPM, lower RPM == less noise. Two 120mm fans should give you all the airflow you'll ever need...
If you're an avid gamer, and want to play the latest games with the graphics detail turned up, and at a reasonable framerate, a sub $100 card isn't going to cut it. Plus those cards do not have DirectX 9 support, which would be nice to have for many upcoming games (though you wouldn't be able to play with high graphics settings on those cards anyway). For a gamer to buy anything lower than a r9700 right now would be a waste, if they have future compatibility in mind.
Wow, this is almost "retro". Goatse is so 2001. Tubgirl is so 2002. We need something new.
It was like 10 years ago when we all had fun with "prince of persia" in the all mighty's XT @8mHz...
I mean the whole computer world has evolved, into GPU's that are faster than CPU's 12 months old, using big smart busses (128, 256 even 512 bits), using DDR3 technology...
I had a XT, and i spent almost the same daily hours playing that i currently spend today... is just me or is the same but bigger, faster and stronger?
Putting a windows cd backwards, plays evil messages, but it gets worse, putting it right, installs windows.
Was there no big news when the first 3d accelerator was introduced? All they did was to package together some components and materials.
This is where it's really at.
:)
0 712/etc_tnn500a.html
http://www.directron.com/fanless.html
It's a Zalman case that is coming soon. It will cost a lot - but the entire case acts as a big heatsink. They claim it can easily cool the hottest GPU & CPU's out there, assuming your PC room isn't a furnace, I presume.
Here's a japanese link verifying Zalman as the people behind it. http://www.watch.impress.co.jp/akiba/hotline/2003
This is the holy grail for silent computing enthusiasts!
Anyway ... it's hard to top the anus for pure offense.
--
Power to the Peaceful
Anyway, I have no idea why it works so well, but it definitely does. It's something to consider instead of passive cooling, and it's almost certainly more efficient too.
Why the hell would you have a GeForceTi in a server?
Tom's Hardware also has a review of this Zalman heatsink and the Sapphire Atlantis Radeon 9700 PRO Ultimate Edition.
... the VGA's have slots and motherboards are ontop VGA's :)
These cards are just standard card's running Zalman's ZM80 cooler.
:(
I bought one of these for my GF3 and found the kit well made, and easy to install. Overall a good setup.
I later bought a Sapphire 9700 Pro Ultimate Edition with a ZM80 pre-installed (just like the cards above). The heat synch was improperly aligned, the conduction tube was bent away from the sync and almost NO thermal compound was evident between the tube and the heat sync plates. (Zalman's install instructions stress the importance of maximizing contact area between the plates and the tube)
I WOULD buy another ZM80, but I wouldn't buy another sapphire card with one pre installed.
IMO stay away from these cards. buy a regular version, and install a passive cooler yourself.
"(I was actually worried that the fans might not be working, but the card stays a relatively cool 62C. The cutoff is 140C.)"
I guess realitively is the operative word. The fan on my GF3 went out and the card hit about 60C. The card of course locked up and now when the card gets past 40C I start having problems. I usually have to underclock my processor (1150 on a 1200) to get the machine to boot. Occasionally one of the IBM hard drives will disappear. Cool the machine down. 3 Intake (2 HDD coolers), 4 out (PSU included, 1 next to the video card) and two internal (CPU, chipset). Noisy but in the next room, and without AC room can be 90F. Think maybe watercooling would be better despite the risk.
With all the competition these days in the 3D Accelerator market
The vast majority of consumer PCs ship with one of the following:
1. Intel Extreme Graphics 2 (a motherboard chipset roughly equivalent to a TNT2).
2. GeForce 4 MX (essentially GeForce 2 with more fillrate, but without programmable shaders).
The little bit of competition is all at rather small high-end of the market, with nVidia and ATI out diddling each other by a few percent every couple of months. Hardware fanboys excepted, this is uninteresting.
It may have not come with a fancy heavy heat sink, but it sure heated up to the point of automatic self-destruction pretty well without much prompting from myself. Needless to say, it was pretty dissapointing.
When I got the replacement in the mail I had to cool it with a smaller house fan until I went out and purchased a pci fan and placed it RIGHT NEXT to it.
So, no wonder they're pushing these big cooling rigs.......
Many Thanks,
Luke
I love it when you Apple die hards come out of the woodwork to slam PCs. I love it even more when you attempt to pull off your bs in the context of recording.
/. Here's some advice: Don't plug your equipment into the same circuit you have your refridgerator plugged into, for starters. If you are going to flame, make sure you know what the hell you are talking about. Nothing is tougher to swallow than a bitter, uneducated geek.
So you think PCs can't record? You do realize that all the same hardware (and yes, even most of the software) is there to be used by both platforms, right? Well, Logic isn't supported on PC anymore, I'll give you that. Of course, the only useful thing about Logic is its MIDI editing functionality, which of course is totally unrelated to digital recording.
Hmm, background noise. Yeah that's obviously an issue that affects PC users and no one else. Tell that to anyone with a reel to reel, cassette multitrack, console hard disk recorder, etc. Of course, when you learn that 99.9% of your hum and buzz will be eliminated when you use properly shielded cables and learn how to keep your signals separated... Who am I kidding, if you had learned these things you would be out recording, not coming up with bitter trolls on
The PC cannot replace pro level stuff, unless you are willing to use high grade components at which point Apple becomes much cheaper!
What the hell does that mean? You can't have professional quality equipment without using high grade components? Brilliant observation, Watson. How long did it take to unearth that revolutionary pearl of wisdom? What 'equipment' are you talking about here? The only piece of equipment you need to record on a computer is an interface for your audio signals. This could be as simple as a sound card with a mic input or as complex as a rack of MOTU interfaces at 24 channels each. Regardless, all the same hardware is available for both platforms at the same cost. It's sad that you didn't even take 2 minutes with a web search to figure that out.
Listen, just because you got your ass handed to you in the first round of American Idol, don't think you can just come in here and flame away. Well, you did specifically mention MS Office in your post, so I guess that gives you *some* credibility around here.
Whoo hoo, yay for off topic flame wars!
on linux. Slashdot is a canadian company/ati is a canadian company. It doesn't take a genius to figure out why this dipshit company (ati) is prevalent on slashdot.
./ for any other reason then to spice up some hype for the dipshit company.
If you call a faster core and bus speed on the G3's double dipping you might be able to consider yourself correct. The only other improvement was pixel shaders and that doesn't belong to M$, sorry.
Nvidia is a solid performer on linux for drivers and support, ati has a history of fucking over it's customers. This article has little place on
I got my Gainward FX 5200 for around $89. It too is passively cooled, but 3D performance is just above GeForce 2 levels. FWIW, it supports DirectX 9.
It also runs ok under Mandrake 9.1, though you have to use the text install.
Note that the passively cooled is plain old FX 5200, not FX 5200 ultimate, which has a buzzy fan.
Jon Acheson
All opinions expressed herein are my own, and not those of my employers, who are appalled.
I am not an apple user however I know alot of musicians and sound/vid people that are.
PC hardware sucks! Even some of the high end stuff is crap, the motherboard, case, power supplies, and generally every component made for pc are cheap crap. Vid cards that are proprietary to the PC are the same. I use a (P)iece of (C)rap myself, and spend my sound dollars on real recording equipment, good mics mixers and 24/96 dat. I use a PC only for MS office and Linux, it is useless for anything else.
OH THE SHAME I fell off the wagon and use sigs again!
The mainstay was getting a silent case(Antec Sonata-Highly recomended) and powersupply. The case has some sound reducing material in the front and a quiet power supply. Using a large heat sink on the processor and a low RPM fan i keep my CPU very cool. I put the Zalman VGA cooler on my 9500 pro and it not only runs great, but actually it also runs cooler.
The only case fan i have is a large low rpm fan out the back. It all runs like a charm and seems to always be lower than room temperature. (Damn AC is on the opposite side of the apartment.)
"This is the holy grail for silent computing enthusiasts!"
No the holy grail is computers with intelligent power managment throughout, coupled with an overall efficient design. Packaged in a clean and compact manner, all at a reasonable price.
So what's the latest on the relationship between ATI and linux? For a while there I recall the word being that ATI cards finally had feature complete support under linux, but then I think I heard that that was gonna end. Things were looking good there when they got a bunch of veteran, elite Unix driver writers with the purchase of the Fire GL company, but what's the latest?
I have no use for only partial support because then ATI card will be slower than Nvidia card in linux so just buy Nvidia card in first place.
Small tip for those with a small fan making noise and other issues. Take fan off whatever it's mounted to. Look on the back of the fan, you'll see a small adhesive label. Gently peel it off. Apply a drop of lightweight sewing machine oil right at the bearing. Wipe area if needed. Reapply removed label. Metal foil tape works as well. Reattach fan. This will buy you some time to get a new, and better fan.
Did anyone else notice that you had to log in to see the ads?
You need to restart your computer. Hold down the Power button for several seconds or press the Restart button.
Great stuff for those of you gaming in the library.
Fuck that, I just wanna be able to hear my boss's footsteps.
A few years back I thought that about hard disks. An IDE hard disk cost £100, period, unless you wanted to pay a huge premium for a slightly bigger one, and that stayed the same while they grew from 500 Mb to 20 Gb. Now a hard disk costs £50.
Expect the same to happen with graphics cards. Not only will the current high-end cards get cheaper - their successors will probably be slightly cheaper in real terms than the current range are now. The cost of production _will_ most likely fall faster than the technology improves, particularly once diminishing returns start setting in.
This may have changed but I never put anything in that first slot anymore. How many PCI devices do you need in a gaming rig anyway?
I went to battle MC Escher, but drew a blank