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Iceberg Thermal Brings New Air, Liquid, and Er..Drink Coolers to CES

btarunr

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Iceberg Thermal specializes in CPU cooling and fans, with elaborate tower-type, and dual-tower type air coolers, and AIO liquid CPU coolers. It brought practically the entire lineup to 2024 CES, including some interesting bits of hardware. The IceSleet G3 and G4 series are single fin-stack CPU coolers. The IceSleet G3 is at the entry-mid range, capable of thermal loads of 160 W. It uses a single aluminium fin-stack heatsink to which heat drawn from a direct-touch base is fed by three 6 mm-thick copper heat pipes. A single 120 mm fan ventilates it. The IceSleet G4 OC is a step up, and although it's recommended for the same 160 W thermal loads as the G3, it has four 6 mm-thick heatpipes, which should improve heat transfer, allowing you to lower the fan speed. It uses a single 120 mm fan that features addressable RGB lighting. The cooler comes in ice blue+white and black+ice blue 2-tone color variants.

The IceSleet G4 Silent is a further step up, with a cooling capacity of 170 W, a higher density heatsink, four 6 mm-thick copper heatpipes, and a fan tuning that's optimized for low noise. The IceSleet G4 Midnight is similar in characteristics to the G4 OC, but comes in an all-black that includes black anodized aluminium fins, heatpipes, plastic cladding, and of course the fan frame. Although tinted dark, the fan impeller is studded with addressable RGB. The company also unveiled its new IceGale Lightning ARGB series 120 mm fan, with noise levels under 28.9 dBA. These 120 mm spinners of conventional thickness turn at speeds ranging between 200 to 2,200 RPM, pushing 76.74 CFM of airflow, at 2.8 mm H₂O static pressure. The fan comes with a fluid dynamic bearing that's rated for over 70,000 hours by its designers.



IceBerg Thermal also showed off the IceFloe Oasis 360 and Oasis 240 AIO liquid CPU coolers, which it backs with an industry-leading 7-year warranty. The Oasis 360/240 gets the latest generation pump-block technology with a high-speed 3,100 RPM pump motor, a larger microfin lattice for the copper cold plate (which should prove useful with MCM processors such as the Ryzen 9 7000 series; and a rotatable pump-block top cover. The pump-block is connected to a 360 mm or 240 mm radiator, depending on the model, using a 460 mm long tube set. the radiator is ventilated by included IceGale Lightning fans.


Lastly, a neat little oddity with Iceberg Thermal was its IceFloe Aurora drink cooler. You insert a drink can (standard 12 fl oz), and it keeps it cool at 43°F or 6°C. The cooler draws as little as 27 W of power, and needs a 30 W USB-PD power adapter (included). It has an 8-hour auto sleep function, so you don't just leave it running for eternity. On our way out we once again caught the IceFloe M.2 heatsink that we spotted last year at Computex. This thing turns a regular bare M.2 drive to PS5-compatible drives.

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The cooler draws as little as 27 W of power, and needs a 30 W USB-PD power adapter

Oh good. It ought to work better than the crummy USB can chillers from yesteryear then.
 
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I have seen that M.2 "heatsink" for sale at couple of retailers for under $10 and it looks quite overpriced as its just a solid slab of aluminium with no fins. Great example of Low effort engineering from lazy bums as there are proper heatsinks with fins for under half that asking price available on aliexpress.

Better M.2 heatsink:
 
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get a bowl of water, add simple/shitty table salt(don't waste fancy salt) mix with your hand till disolved and add ice cubes mix again put your can/cans wait a few mins colder than ice cold
 
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I find the look of these IceFloe Oasis 240-360 meh :wtf:
Finition seem rushed. I’d rather put a mid range~ Deepcool in my case.
 
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Is this a new company or an old company rebranded? I've never heard of Iceberg Thermal and it looks to me like their USP is gimmicky plastic mouldings in the shape of an iceberg for their cooler shroud and fan frames.

Thanks, happy to pass.
 
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The modernized can cooler reminds me of Noctua's prototype micro-fridge/can cooler that was teased last year as part of their expanded efforts at cooling products (beyond computers).
 
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