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Iceberg Thermal Gives Competitors the Chills at 2023 International CES

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A relatively new entrant to the PC cooling space, Iceberg Thermal had its first major in-person outing at CES, with the exhibition of several of its newest CPU coolers, purpose-built heatsinks, case fans, and thermal pastes. To begin with, the company showed off its IceGale Xtra, IceGale ARGB, and IceGale Silent case fans. The IceGale Xtra comes in 80 mm, 120 mm, and 140 mm sizes, and in color options of icy-blue, gray, and black. These fans lack illumination, but offer a solid combination of high RPM range and dual-ball bearings. The IceGale ARGB fans are essentially the same, but come only in 120 mm and 140 mm sizes, and only in icy-blue and black frame options. These ones feature addressable RGB LEDs in the fan impeller hub, with the frost-finish impeller blades diffusing the light. The IceGale Silent series is a line of entry-level case fans that come in 120 mm size and black trim, with sleeve bearings. The fan is claimed to offer a noise output of just 12.3 dBA.

The FuzeIce thermal interface material ships in flattened piston syringes that double up as applicators. This is an electrically non-conductive TIM that offers thermal conductivity of 11.25 W/mK, 56,000 poise viscosity, and 2.6 g/cm³ density. It comes in 3.5 g and 7 g syringes. Iceberg Thermal also showed off a wide range of custom-design heatsinks that are purpose-built for a wide range of cooling needs. These are not sold to customers in the retail channel, but the company is looking to become an OEM for purpose-built air-cooling solutions. Moving on to the good stuff, and we see the company show off a trio of its IceSleet series CPU coolers for the DIY retail channel. These include the IceSleet G4 OC, IceSleet G4 Midnight, IceSleet X5, IceSleet X6, IceSleet X7 Dual, IceSleet X9 Dual, and a couple of IceFloe low-profile coolers.



The IceSleet X6 is an aluminium fin-stack tower heatsink that uses six 6 mm-thick copper heatpipes, and a single 120 mm fan that has ARGB illumination. Iceberg claims that the X6 offers cooling capacity of 200 W. The IceSleet X5 is a slight step down from this, although it has an overall similar size. The X5 packs five 6 mm-thick copper heatpipes, the same 120 mm ARGB fan, and offers 160 W of cooling capacity. The IceSleet G4 OC and G4 Midnight are slightly thicker than the X5, offer 180 W cooling capacity, and their fans aren't integral to their design like most other IceSleet coolers, offering a higher degree of adjustability, to scoop out more RAM clearance. All that sets the two G4 series coolers apart is that the Midnight variant lacks any ARGB lighting, and is all-black.

The IceSleet X7 Dual and X9 Dual are large dual fan coolers. The X7 Dual is the slightly smaller among the two, offering a cooling capacity of 225 W, and using seven 6 mm-thick copper heat pipes, along with a dual fan setup of 120 mm and 140 mm fans. The X9 Dual is larger, with a bigger heatsink that uses nine 6 mm-thick copper heatpipes, the same 140 mm + 120 mm fan setup; but increased cooling capacity of 280 W. Lastly, there are the IceFlow T95 and IceFlow T65 low-profile fan-heatsinks made from extruded aluminium monoblocks. The T95 uses a 92 mm hydraulic bearing fan, and has a cooling capacity of 95 W; while the T65 uses a much smaller 42 mm heatsink for a cooling capacity of 65 W.



Among the other stuff we saw at the Iceberg Thermal booth included the IceFloe M.2 heatsink for M.2-2280 SSDs and PlayStation 5 compatibility; and the DriftIce LT line of thermal pads that come in 14 cm x 14 cm sheets that are 2 mm-thick, and can be cut to shape. These offer conductivity as high as 11 W/mK.



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@crazyeyesreaper Any chance we will get a review from this brand? I am... curious. That fan design looks strange too.
 
So they have learned from EK to sell solid slabs of metal as Heatsinks.


Review of one of their older heatsink, not sure if they have updated this one or not.

scythe fuma 2 rev b is the best air cooler made imo. amazing it only costs $63.
 
Not a fan of the mid 2000's plastic fantastic form over function design. Time to advance to a more minimalistic, essential look to these kinds of products. Make it cool better instead of making it look like a prop from a children's TV show of bygone times.
 
From the article thubnails alone, those irregular blue cooler shrouds looked like plastic bags :)
 
I'm sure this looked really great in their concept renders. Something tells me this is one of those cases where reality did not meet expectations and the manufacturer just has to roll with it.
 
I am out of the loop, but I thought ball-bearing designs were the silent ones?
 
And people think Noctua colors are bad...
 
And people think Noctua colors are bad...
People think they LOOK bad, not perform bad. These things look like ass but probably perform well, seeing as how many good air coolers are about.

Edit Thought you said "Noctua COOLERS", oops.
 
hahahaha that title, "CHILL OUT"
Watching Arnold Schwarzenegger GIF


The low-poly shrouds in mr. freeze light blue are not my cup of tea, it's like someone was browsing printables.com and came upon those "low poly" models (low poly planter, etc) and thought "oh yeah, low poly CPU HSF SHROUD!". Maybe they'll look a tad better in black but i understand that light blue(¿teal?, dunno i'm a man i can only identify 5 colours :D) is their brand colour.

and yes i second that scythe fuma 2 rev b is the best air cooler at the moment, maybe the monster D15 has marginally better cooling but doubles the price.

edit: Contrary to what the article says i find their custom/industrial offerings far more interesting than the "consumer" stuff..., that monster tower with 12 heatpipes that looks like it could passively cool the Instinct MI300
 
deepcool assassin version 1 or 3 is the best imo
I don't overclock. For me, the best cooler is something that shaves a few degrees and a lot of the noise off of a stock cooler. Oh, and one that doesn't anywhere near a kilogram.
 
Noctua: "turd the day after chili night" brown.
Iceberg: "toothpaste" blue.
 
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