Friday, August 5th 2022

EK Rolls Out New Delta² TEC for LGA 1700 and Intel 12th Gen Core CPUs

EK, the leading computer cooling solutions provider, releases the latest generation of its TEC solution - the EK-Quantum Delta² TEC - a CPU water block for extreme cooling. In collaboration with Intel, EK has developed a next-generation water block for enthusiasts seeking consistent peak performance and ultimate overclocking of the unlocked 12th Gen Intel Core desktop processors.

This water block is based on Peltier (ThermoElectricCooler) technology and can transport heat using the Peltier effect. Inside the TEC plate, the Peltier effect produces a temperature difference between the two sides by flowing a current through it. This means the cold plate, which is in contact with the CPU, can be lowered to sub-ambient temperatures while the liquid cooling loop cools the hot side of the TEC.
The EK-Quantum Delta² TEC brings further improvements to the original EK-Quantum Delta TEC design. Instead of the one original TEC plate, the new generation has four TEC plates. These are soldered to the bottom of the water block that goes over the CPU, improving the contact and cooling the block and eventually the CPU. Another improvement is that TEC plates are no longer made of aluminium Oxide but aluminium Nitride (AlN). aluminium Nitride (AlN) ceramic plates are cutting-edge thermoelectric plates that significantly improve power efficiency, especially at higher power levels.

The water block features the signature Quantum design, also seen on Velocity² products, along with the controller unit. The controller is now a separate element, intended to be mounted on a nearby 120 mm fan mounting inside the case. As such, it no longer impairs the visual appearance of the water block, which was the case with previous generations of EK TEC products. The control unit can now connect and control the pump and fans of the loop used to cool the TEC plate, making it even more user-friendly.

And this is not where improvements stop. Further updates were made to the insulation that prevents condensation, now with a dense high precision-made rubber frame instead of foam. The water block uses built-in mounting screws already equipped with retention springs. It also has two additional thermal sensors - one on the hot and one on the cold side of the Peltier element - for precise monitoring and control of the TEC plates.

It is exclusively powered by Intel Cryo Cooling Technology, a unique combination of hardware, software, and firmware designed to help unleash extraordinary performance for gamers and those hunting for the highest boost frequencies.

This unique cooler is made for maximum performance and frequencies during heavy loads on a single core or lighter loads across more cores. It is not intended for torture and stress test software that applies heavy synthetic load across all cores, like Prime95.

The EK-Quantum Delta² TEC is built using a purpose-designed large-surface flow-through cooling engine with the Intel Cryo Cooling Technology, bridging aesthetic uniformity and near-silent operation with technological advancements in thermal solutions. The cooler presents an exceptional application of CPU cooling with sub-ambient temperatures by utilizing the Thermoelectric Cooler (TEC) plate while continuously monitoring and adjusting temperatures dynamically, achieving an ideal operating environment for sustained gaming performance.

Liquid coolers are unable to reach temperatures below ambient (room) temperature, while EK-Quantum Delta² TEC uses cutting-edge technology - actively cooling the CPU to sub-ambient temperatures while extracting and dissipating the heat generated from the TEC plate through the traditional liquid cooling loop.

The EK-Quantum Delta² TEC utilizes an innovative two-pronged approach to mitigate condensation, a byproduct that has plagued previous attempts of sub-ambient cooling. The cooler features a compact integrated insulation rubber shroud that isolates all exposed cold surfaces from the environmental conditions inside the PC, while Intel Cryo Cooling Technology continuously monitors the TEC and ambient temperature to adapt itself to those conditions and prevent condensation generated by the cooling process. An additional sensor is located inside the control unit to monitor the humidity inside the chassis and avoid the dew point.

Availability and Pricing
The EK-Quantum Delta² TEC is available for pre-order through the EK Online Store (Editor's note: It costs $540 in the USA). This product is estimated to ship out in mid-August 2022.
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56 Comments on EK Rolls Out New Delta² TEC for LGA 1700 and Intel 12th Gen Core CPUs

#26
junglist724
HenrySomeoneDon't pin some eastern European company's cash grab stunts on Intel!
Posted on Reply
#27
bogami
An excellent addition, especially for a top of the line processor, it will be added in all areas of processor utilization. Only the price is high for many enthusiasts. regardless, if you want the maximum utilization of the processor, it is necessary to choose suitable other parts that will support this. I want to, but I can't buy it. Oh oh mmmm . :) :clap:
Posted on Reply
#28
Ferrum Master
HenrySomeoneDon't pin some eastern European company's cash grab stunts on Intel!
From where you come to scorn anyone as some being from eastern EU?
Posted on Reply
#29
80251
Adam Ant? The dandy highwayman? Is that you Stuart Leslie Goddard?
Posted on Reply
#30
TheoneandonlyMrK
Bloax"Looking for MAXIMUM PERFORMANCE AND FREQUENCIES"

yeah bucko, I've got a system with pre-overclocked RAM to sell you, and it would cost you much less than a 540 USD markup plus a spare waterloop
as high CPU frequencies are worthless if the memory isn't fast enough to meaningfully feed it data in time
and hey, with so much spare performance from the properly-running RAM - you might even afford to run the CPU at reasonable settings, instead of as a 300W furnace!


But something tells me most of the people buying this sort of shiny trinket, will not be running a very good RAM overclock.
Oh well. Good RAM performance is bad for maximum CPU frequency anyway, makes 'em work too hard to achieve all those empty (but shiny, and BIG) clock cycles.
There's some just slathering at the Idea of messing with it tbf, but I'll build my own before paying that much, tbf I can't be assed or I would have by now, I have 3 spare rads.
Nice though, if I was a millionaire I would own it and a 13900K easy.
Posted on Reply
#31
AsRock
TPU addict
AssimilatorTEC is worthless for cooling CPUs. Why is EK spending R&D on gimmicks like this, and gold waterblocks? Has their management lost its collective minds?
It's the cycle, doing what most do until they come up with some thing else to put in the cycle.
Posted on Reply
#32
WhateverAnotherFreakingID
Berfs1Yeah I'm not paying 540$ for a CPU block.
Featuring, at least from my own personal experience, the most failing USB connection type, I swear those things just happens to break as easy as if you just stares at them too long
Enclosed:
- EK-Quantum Delta² TEC D-RGB - Full Nickel with rubber hosing
- EK-Quantum Delta² TEC D-RGB - Full Nickel controller unit
- Mounting mechanism (screws, mounting plate, necessary washers, etc)
- Uni bracket 120mm for mounting PCB case on a 120mm fan mounting position inside the case
- EK-Cable 5-Pin Motherboard (F) to Micro-USB (M) 50cm (1pcs)
Also worth mentioning the warnings:
Warning:
  • Given that the CPU is cooled by the EK-Quantum Delta² TEC directly to achieve low temperatures, the rest of your liquid cooling loop will be under stress from the TEC plates. Do not use your CPU temperatures as a baseline for your Fan or Pump speeds! It is best to monitor the coolant temperature or set the fans and pump at a fixed speed level!
  • To keep your warranty please use licensed Intel software and follow the manual.
  • Delta TEC is not designed for ALL CORE MAX frequency under heavy load, but it's intended for a lighter load like gaming and ONE CORE MAX boost. The TEC is not suitable for benchmarking with software like Prime95 which heavily loads all cores on the CPU.
And at last, Peltier cells are known to be power hungry energy inefficient devices, so yeah just add those watts, never mentioned in the tech specs btw, ... I wonder why.... on top of MTP of 241W of Alder/Raptor Lake, happy BBQ everyone!
Posted on Reply
#33
fevgatos
WhateverAnotherFreakingIDeaturing, at least from my own personal experience, the most failing USB connection type, I swear those things just happens to break as easy as if you just stares at them too long



Also worth mentioning the warnings:


And at last, Peltier cells are known to be power hungry energy inefficient devices, so yeah just add those watts, never mentioned in the tech specs btw, ... I wonder why.... on top of MTP of 241W of Alder/Raptor Lake, happy BBQ everyone!
If you know what they are good for, they are fine. They are not meant to run CBR23 man, for gaming workloads you can pretty much have the CPU permanently running at 5.5+ ghz
Posted on Reply
#34
Bloax
Peltier coolers are probably best at keeping very low power devices (like RAM) at a constant sub-ambient temperature by cooling a fluid encasing them, rather than the chips themselves.

If you care about videogaming performance, then you'd be more interested in what I sell (RAM OC) than silly toys for rich boys.

What does well-configured RAM give you? Responsiveness, stability, smoothness (last two are related) of frame delivery.
What does 5.1 -> 5.5 GHz P-Core give you? Disappointingly little of these things!

speaking of responsiveness and smoothness;
someone really liked the impact performing this (surprisingly simple) process had on their system - though it's one of many things that add up to a Well-Running System :)
it is however, one of the "big impact" ones that is easiest to do
Posted on Reply
#35
fevgatos
BloaxPeltier coolers are probably best at keeping very low power devices (like RAM) at a constant sub-ambient temperature by cooling a fluid encasing them, rather than the chips themselves.

If you care about videogaming performance, then you'd be more interested in what I sell (RAM OC) than silly toys for rich boys.

What does well-configured RAM give you? Responsiveness, stability, smoothness (last two are related) of frame delivery.
What does 5.1 -> 5.5 GHz P-Core give you? Disappointingly little of these things!

speaking of responsiveness and smoothness;
someone really liked the impact performing this (surprisingly simple) process had on their system - though it's one of many things that add up to a Well-Running System :)
it is however, one of the "big impact" ones that is easiest to do
You realize that you can have both right? Nobody is stopping you from tuning your ram while also tuning your CPU
Posted on Reply
#36
MarsM4N
That's exaxtly the product we need in a global energy crisis. :kookoo:
Great job, EK. Pretty sure it will rain awards. Also funny how they didn't mention the power usage numbers, lol.

Posted on Reply
#37
Bloax
fevgatosYou realize that you can have both right? Nobody is stopping you from tuning your ram while also tuning your CPU
If you've got a burning coal in your wallet, yes - though at that point you should really be looking into binned CPUs, lapping and a chiller instead, so as to stack enough Diminishing Returns factors into a measureable final impact. ;)
The chiller is also re-usable - so long as both it, and the victim CPU, are lapped flat - unlike a one-trick peltier pony, very nice!

As far as RAM-OC'd systems go, then one 12600k with a board and a half-decent 2x8 kit would run you not much more than just a 12900k on its own - and beat the crap out of it in Videogaming Experience™️.
Fun stuff, but who's buyin'?
Posted on Reply
#38
hat
Enthusiast
I haven't heard of peltier coolers in a while. I'm pretty sure a water chiller would work better at this point, rather than dumping 600w of heat in your loop. Even the most heavily overclocked CPUs shouldn't draw so much...
Posted on Reply
#39
B NEGATIVE
Garbage, out of touch product from the greedy, self absorbed trash can of a company.

Not surprised tbh. The sooner this company goes bankrupt, the better. At least we wont have long to wait now they sacked half of their staff and have plans on sacking more... using credit to make payroll is not a smart business move.


Business angel? Business Potato more like.
Posted on Reply
#40
trsttte
MarsM4NThat's exaxtly the product we need in a global energy crisis. :kookoo:
ABSOLUTELY!!! If the point is going extreme and price is already out the door anyway why the hell are we still seing these stupid peltier "coolers" instead of just going with a full blown chiller that with proper design could be small and use a lot less power!? It would still be stupid and inefficient but compared to a peltier at least it wouldn't consume 3 to 4 times the amount of power of the product it's trying to cool.


The version of this that was initially done by Cooler Master had a thick rubber gasget to isolate any condensation that I don't see here but I guess anyone who's buying something like this can replace the components when they short out without any problems :shadedshu:
Posted on Reply
#41
TheoneandonlyMrK
Makes you wonder what was cooling all these raptor lake leaks though doesn't it, made in collaboration with Intel, and shipping today, so around for a while.

Not for Heavy use!, that's some caveat there light gaming and quick benchmark runs only:D I'm seeing comedy ahead, less chiller to hide eh, smart intel.
Posted on Reply
#42
HBSound
Has anyone discovered any valuable components for their system? Are they constructing their own thermoelectric cooling (TEC) system with radiators? How is its performance? Thank you!
Posted on Reply
#43
Mussels
Freshwater Moderator
HBSoundHas anyone discovered any valuable components for their system? Are they constructing their own thermoelectric cooling (TEC) system with radiators? How is its performance? Thank you!
Sorry, what's your question?
Posted on Reply
#44
HBSound
MusselsSorry, what's your question?
Has anyone inserted their own version of a TEC / Cryo cooling system into their current PC? Outside of the EKWB and Coolmaster?
Posted on Reply
#45
maxfly
If you're honestly interested in using TECs successfully, there's a dude over at ocforums that has configured his entire system around them. He explains how he went about building and tweaking it in detail. Let me know if you want to check it out and I'll dig up his build thread.
Posted on Reply
#46
HBSound
maxflyIf you're honestly interested in using TECs successfully, there's a dude over at ocforums that has configured his entire system around them. He explains how he went about building and tweaking it in detail. Let me know if you want to check it out and I'll dig up his build thread.
Yes, I would love the info.

Thank you.
Posted on Reply
#49
Mussels
Freshwater Moderator
HBSoundHas anyone inserted their own version of a TEC / Cryo cooling system into their current PC? Outside of the EKWB and Coolmaster?
If you mean companies, there was a very limited range of them for intel only.

As for third party/DIY solutions there are plenty - but they're generally terrible. Extremely inefficient, noisy, hot.
Posted on Reply
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