"Behold! The Most Insane Crowdfunding Campaign Ever"
You had me at:
Hold on to your hats, because this is a good one. It’s a tale of
disregarding the laws of physics, cancelled crowdfunding campaigns and a
menagerie of blogs who take press releases at face value.
From Hack a Day:
Hold on to your hats, because this is a good one. It’s a tale of
disregarding the laws of physics, cancelled crowdfunding campaigns, and a
menagerie of blogs who take press releases at face value.
Meet Silent Power (Google translation).
It’s a remarkably small and fairly powerful miniature gaming computer
being put together by a team in Germany. The specs are pretty good for a
completely custom computer: an i7 4785T, GTX 760, 8GB of RAM and a
500GB SSD. Not a terrible machine for something that will eventually
sell for about $930 USD, but what really puts this project in the
limelight is the innovative cooling system and small size. The entire
machine is only 16x10x7 cm, accented with a very interesting “copper
foam” heat sink on top. Sounds pretty cool, huh? It does, until you
start to think about the implementation a bit. Then it’s a descent into
madness and a dark pit of despair.
There are a lot of things that are completely wrong with this
project, and in true Hackaday fashion, we’re going to tear this one
apart, figuring out why this project will never exist.
The Hardware
The specs for this machine are pretty good; it’s not a slouch by any means. The CPU is an Intel i7 4785T.
A pretty good chip, but one with the lowest thermal design power of its
generation – 35 Watts – not surprising given that the team behind
Silent Power is going for a completely passively cooled product.
The graphics card, however, is not a low power part. The Nvidia GTX
760 is a 170 Watt card, and most certainly not the best choice for a
passively cooled system. A better choice would be the GTX 750 Ti: they
would get reasonably similar performance with a 60 Watt card. saving
them from having to get rid of 110 Watts of heat. If you’ve ever touched
a hot 100 Watt light bulb, that’s about how much heat the small
performance increase from the GTX 760 to the GTX 750 Ti produces. That’s
also the amount of extra heat the innovative copper foam heat sink
needs to get rid of because of this one design decision.
Chip choices and component selection notwithstanding, a much more
interesting aspect of this hardware is the form factor. It’s a pretty
small enclosure, only 16x10x7 cm. The smallest commonly available
motherboard size, Mini-ITX is 17 cm square and obviously wouldn’t fit in
the enclosure. Maybe they’re going with a newer, smaller form factor
like the Intel NUC? Nope. They’re designing their own integrated system,
mounting the GPU and CPU on one board, and the RAM and the Flash chips
that make up the SSD on another. There are supposedly a total of three
boards in this computer, all separated by expensive, high-speed
interconnects....MORE