Wednesday, January 8th 2025

TCOMAS Air and Liquid CPU Coolers at the 2025 CES

TCOMAS brought a slick lineup of air and liquid CPU coolers to the 2025 International CES. We begin our tour with the AF640, a premium aluminium dual fin-stack CPU cooler. Its most striking feature is its top-plate, which has an LED segment display that talks to software over a USB 2.0 header, and puts out system monitoring info from the ACPI—CPU temperature, fan speed, CPU power draw, clock speed, etc. The cooler includes a pair of pre-installed fans with custom frames. The external "push" fan is 92 mm, with a frame size of 108 mm x 125 mm x 30 mm; while the inner "pull" fan located between the two fin-stacks is a 120 mm, with a 125 mm x 125 mm x 30 mm frame. The two fans slide out from the sides. The cooler comes in black and white trims.

Next up, are the company's stackable fans. The F700 comes in packs of 3, and features a mechanical interlock that lets you stack these up on a radiator with cabling for just one fan. There are physical control buttons on each fan to control their spin direction. Illumination is care of a Gen 2 ARGB LED setup. Each fan features a double ball-bearing. It turns at speeds between 600 and 2,000 RPM. In its conventional direction, the fan pushes up to 67.5 CFM of airflow, at 3.42 mm H₂O static pressure, and up to 38 dBA of noise output. In the reverse setting, it does up to 70.33 CFM of airflow, at 3.53 mm H₂O static pressure, and 40.3 dBA of noise output.
The FC700 Pro is the company's premium stackable fan set, it comes in 120 mm sizes. The frame has soft-touch surfaces, and grommets around the mounts, The impeller is made of PPS plastic. The motor is suspended on fluid-dynamic bearings that's rated for 60,000 hours. The mechanical interlock supports up to four fans. Each of these turns at speeds ranging between 650 and 3,200 RPM. At top speed, it pushes 115.32 CFM of airflow, at 7.48 mm H₂O static pressure, and 41 dBA noise output.
We now move on to AIO CLCs, starting with the LA100 360, a mainstream-segment cooler. The pump-block features a magnetized top, letting you mount custom bezels on top. The radiator is 29 mm thick, and additional coolant, for 10% more heat dissipation area than competing 360 mm AIOs in the segment. The fans are spec'd at 900 to 2,600 RPM, pushing up to 85.21 CFM of airflow at 3.2 mm H₂O, and 36.45 dBA, each. The cooler takes in a standard ARGB connection for the lighting.
The LE200 360 is a step up from the LA100, its signature feature is its cuboid-shaped pump-block with a diagonal beam in the middle. This makes two triangular infinity reflection surfaces. The cooler comes with a 29 mm-thick radiator. Each of the three included rifle bearing fans turns between 650 and 2,500 RPM, pushing up to 81 CFM of airflow, at 3.2 mm H₂O static pressure, and 35 dBA of noise output. You'll need a standard ARGB connection for the lighting. The LE100 360 is a lite version of the LE200 360, it mostly has the same cooling specs and performance, with the only difference being the design of its pump-block. It has a more conventional puck-shaped design, with a silicone ARGB LED diffuser on top.
The LX800 Pro 360 is the company's most premium AIO CLC. It comes with a pump-block that has not one, but two displays. The block is puck-shaped, but which is flat on one side. The top features a round 2.8-inch dia IPS LCD, which can be programmed by software to display just about anything. The second display on the side is a 1.44-inch rectangular LCD segment display that puts out real-time monitoring stats (which again is pulled from ACPI-reading software). The included fans are more premium, come with fluid-dynamic bearings, with specs similar to the FC700 Pro fan set with mechanical interlocks.
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1 Comment on TCOMAS Air and Liquid CPU Coolers at the 2025 CES

#1
Chaitanya
Never heard of them and looked up their website which is quite badly designed.
Posted on Reply
Jan 9th, 2025 12:01 EST change timezone

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