Intel Patents Related Component Cooling Concept

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An interesting idea, but I'm not sure if this doesn't just fall into the "common sense" category. All it is doing is using general thermal readings to adjust the output of a specific device.
 
Good concept but is a little impractical for a enthusiast level desktops because they can afford cooling for almost every components without need to worry about performance
 
[citation][nom]dudzcom[/nom]sounds like the just patented Thermal Conductivity[/citation]
I think you meant that they just patented Heat Convection.
 
[citation][nom]theuniquegamer[/nom]Good concept but is a little impractical for a enthusiast level desktops because they can afford cooling for almost every components without need to worry about performance[/citation]
probably they can afford earplugs too
 
Actually, this makes a lot of sense. Let's say you increase the voltage on your DRAM so that you can OC it. That means your DRAM is hotter than it would otherwise typically be. Then lets say that you run an algorithm that is hard on your DRAM , but doesn't tax the CPU all that much. You end up with an isolated hot-spot in your DRAM. Your CPU fan speed would still be slow due to the low load on the CPU. Your case fans might not have sped up very much because the total system temperature might not have gone up by much at all. But the additional heat from your DRAM could be enough to cause an instability.

Now lets say that the CPU fan controller is configured so that it knows there is a relationship between CPU fan speed and DRAM temperature. When this scenario happens, the CPU fan controller senses the increased local temperature of the DRAM, and spins up the CPU fan to help maintain system stability.

Similar concepts could probably apply to Vregs, chipsets, PCIe switches, Ethernet PHY chips, and other system components that typically don't have temperature management logic built-in. It wouldn't be the most noise-efficient way to keep such components adequately cooled, but it would probably be the most economical and would certainly be better than spinning available fans at max speed all the time.
 
I understand what they are saying. How is it patentable? Now if they started to manufacture their MB with defined thermal zones with interlocking sensors and cooling solutions it might lead to some future design for total MB cooling.
 
Have you any idea how small is 1 CPU? Less that the half head of a needle and the big question for Intel is how managed to make produce so much heat with so little volts, I mean our water heater is not that efficient!?

Nobody cares about their crap.
 
[citation][nom]dudzcom[/nom]sounds like the just patented Thermal Conductivity[/citation]

Actually, I can one-up their patent by patenting thermal physics, and suing anyone who dares to take advantage of the physics.

Screw prior art!
 
[citation][nom]TeraMedia[/nom]Actually, this makes a lot of sense. Let's say you increase the voltage on your DRAM so that you can OC it. That means your DRAM is hotter than it would otherwise typically be. Then lets say that you run an algorithm that is hard on your DRAM , but doesn't tax the CPU all that much. You end up with an isolated hot-spot in your DRAM. Your CPU fan speed would still be slow due to the low load on the CPU. Your case fans might not have sped up very much because the total system temperature might not have gone up by much at all. But the additional heat from your DRAM could be enough to cause an instability.Now lets say that the CPU fan controller is configured so that it knows there is a relationship between CPU fan speed and DRAM temperature. When this scenario happens, the CPU fan controller senses the increased local temperature of the DRAM, and spins up the CPU fan to help maintain system stability.Similar concepts could probably apply to Vregs, chipsets, PCIe switches, Ethernet PHY chips, and other system components that typically don't have temperature management logic built-in. It wouldn't be the most noise-efficient way to keep such components adequately cooled, but it would probably be the most economical and would certainly be better than spinning available fans at max speed all the time.[/citation]

False. Also with a half-decent case case you can run fans at max and not hear them over your GPU while having your system stable at 100% load 24/7
 
I can't believe this is actually patentable! Sometimes when I'm going to be gaming for a while, I decide to lower the room temperature by a few degrees (room equiped with A/C) so my PC won't heat up as much while I'm gaming. I should go patent this concept immediately even though I am sure most gamers have been aware of this solution long before I ever played my first video game!
 
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