A Super Fanless Chassis from TureMetal: For DIY & 0 db Workstations
by Anton Shilov on June 20, 2019 11:00 AM ESTHigh-performance and DIY desktop computers use either sophisticated air or liquid cooling systems. While there are passively cooled PCs, they typically are either proprietary or work with a limited set of components. Mical Wong, an enthusiast from Shanghai, decided to change that and founded TureMetal Fanless Design Studio, which builds cases for fanless DIY desktops. TureMetal was at Computex this year to show off its latest designs.
TureMetal currently offers five fanless PC cases: the DP2, UP7, UP3, UP5, and UP10, all aimed at different kinds of systems. Three of them are designed for smaller desktops that do not need a lot of compute horsepower, but two of them can be used to build high-performance gaming or workstation PCs with discrete graphics, plenty of storage space and so on.
All the enclosures use the same cooling principle: transfer heat from the key components to large radiators located on the sides of the chassis using heat pipes, almost in effect using the whole chassis as a heatsink. The main advantage – and the main selling point of all cases from TureMetal – is that they are adjustable, with movable vapor chambers to allow the cooling system to match the layout of the installed motherboard.
We are going to start from TureMetal’s cases for lower-power systems. The smallest DP2 chassis only supports Mini-ITX motherboards, can cool down a 50 ~ 70W CPU with integrated graphics, and uses a proprietary PSU. The larger UP3 case is compatible with Mini-ITX platforms carrying a CPU with up to 85 W TDP, but also does not support a standalone video card. The UP7 enclosure looks like a typical Mini-ITX system, can work with appropriate motherboards and can house a discrete graphics card (yet, the unit does not support passive cooling of a GPU natively). It is noteworthy that all of their cases can work with a variety of Mini-ITX motherboards, thanks in big part to its adjustable CPU vapor chambers.
TureMetal’s UP5 and UP10 chassis are considerably larger yet considerably more sophisticated than the other boxes. Both can cool down higher-end CPUs and GPUs and house multiple storage devices. The UP5 can accommodate a Mini-ITX or Micro-ATX motherboard and cool down a performance-mainstream CPU and GPU.
By contrast, the UP10 can house an ATX mainboard. Furthermore, the UP10 can remove 120 ~ 180 W of heat from a CPU as well as 170 ~ 250 W of heat from a GPU, enough for HEDT processors and top-of-the-range graphics cards.
The UP5 and UP10 chassis from TureMetal are naturally the most versatile cases from the company yet as they can accommodate a variety of components and enable a great variety of PCs: from utterly quiet HTPCs to advanced 0 dB fanless workstations.
In addition to its desktop form-factor cases, TureMetal is also developing a tower case that will be rated for an even higher TDP and thus enable even faster PCs. The case is due sometime in 2020, but the company isn't disclosing any firm launch dates.
Right now, TureMetal’s cases can only be bought directly from the company or from Taobao. The manufacturer hopes that as it gets better known, it will gain retail partners in Asia, Europe, and the US, so its cases will be more widely available.
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51 Comments
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ajp_anton - Thursday, June 20, 2019 - link
0dB isn't just "some reference", the reference is well defined and so 0dB refers to a specific sound pressure level.Also, dB doesn't add easily because of the logarithmic scale. If PC + background is exactly as noisy as the background, the PC needs to be -inf dB.
ajp_anton - Thursday, June 20, 2019 - link
This was supposed to be a reply to another post above. Please ignore.zodiacfml - Friday, June 21, 2019 - link
I think the value is usage in dusty environments as it doesn't need to move much air as conventional PCs, like large heatsinks vs small heatsinks with same cooling performanceNoise can be easily mitigated with large fans and/or isolation to the user.
mode_13h - Sunday, June 23, 2019 - link
His stuff doesn't seem to be sealed, though. You can get industrial PCs, if you need truly dust-proof cases.kgardas - Friday, June 21, 2019 - link
Sweet! Reminds me of Zalman TNN-500 A(F).s.yu - Friday, June 21, 2019 - link
Haha, I think I noticed this guy on Taobao last year, but at the time nothing he sold would support over 300W dissipation.konbala - Friday, June 21, 2019 - link
This is great.deil - Friday, June 21, 2019 - link
I dont understand 0 level builds.be quiet have a fan that can do 59.3 CFM @ 10.7 dBA @ 550 RPM
this is no different than 0 level for our perception and would half the weight & cost....
eastcoast_pete - Friday, June 21, 2019 - link
Too bad the all-passively cooled oil immersion approach never took off. I always liked the idea: just submerse the whole shebang in 20-30 liters (or more) of high quality mineral oil (dielectric, non-corrosive) and allow for heat exchange to the environment by using an (oil-tight) aluminum case. The major downside is that any hardware change gets a bit messy. But, for a build-and-forget system, not a bad approach.mode_13h - Sunday, June 23, 2019 - link
In HPC, it seems to be gaining popularity. For them, the main argument is probably density, and perhaps it becomes simpler and cheaper to immerse the whole thing in fluid than to snake tubing through all the CPUs, GPUs, VRMs, memory, etc.