Akasa's Turing: A Passively-Cooled Chassis for Intel’s Bean Canyon NUC
by Anton Shilov on February 8, 2019 3:00 PM EST- Posted in
- Desktop
- Cases/Cooling/PSUs
- Passive Cooling
- Chassis
- Cases
- Akasa
Akasa is prepping an aftermarket chassis for Intel’s 8th Gen "Bean Canyon: NUC systems. The Turing chassis will allow Intel’s NUC 8 ultra-compact form-factor (UCFF) computers to be converted to fanless systems, eliminating the noise that they produce.
Intel's Bean Canyon NUC systems are based on the company's 8th Gen Core i3/i5/i8 processors, which offer two or four cores as well as Iris Plus Graphics 655 (GT3e) iGPU. Theu are designed for users who need better graphics performance in a very compact form-factor. Apart from a 28 W CPU, Bean Canyon PCs also pack up to 32 GB of DDR4 memory, an M.2-2280 PCIe 3.0 x4 or SATA SSD, a 2.5-inch storage device, a Thunderbolt 3 controller to plug in an external graphics or storage sub-system, a 802.11ac Wi-Fi solution, and just about everything else that one comes to expect from an UCFF PC. Needless to say, the compact system packs a lot of heat, and as a result it uses a blower-based cooler in order to keep it in check
However Akasa has decided to do one better, and is putting together a chassis for Bean Canyon that allows the NUC to be converted into a passive, silent system.
Akasa is already known for its Galactico chassis (its scheme is depicted below) for Intel’s Skull Canyon NUC aimed at users seeking for UCFF gaming PCs. Based on the pictures of the Turing case published by FanlessTech, the upcoming chassis for Intel's Bean Canyon uses the same principle as its predecessor: it has a large CPU heat exchanger featuring multiple heat pipes that transfer heat from the processor to massive radiators. While the Galactico features two aluminum radiators located on the sides of the chassis, the Turing features an additional radiator above the CPU as well.
Quite naturally, Akasa’s Turing and Galactico chassis make Intel’s NUC systems considerably larger than they originally are, but they eliminate all the noises that these PCs produce. Furthermore, they retain all the I/O ports that the computers have, including GbE, USB Type-A/Type-C, TB3, HDMI, DP, audio, microSD, and even antennae fitting holes.
According to FanlessTech, Akasa will launch its Turing chassis shortly. Pricing is uknown, but it is likely that it will be comparable to a ~$200 MSRP of the Galactico.
Related Reading:
- Intel Officially Launches Bean Canyon NUCs with Coffee Lake-U Processors
- Intel’s Crimson Canyon NUCs with Cannon Lake CPU & Radeon dGPU Available for Pre-Order
- The Intel NUC8i7HVK (Hades Canyon) Review: Kaby Lake-G Benchmarked
- Intel NUC8i7HVK (Hades Canyon) Gaming Performance - A Second Look
- The Intel Skull Canyon NUC6i7KYK mini-PC Review
Source: FanlessTech
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Zingam - Sunday, February 10, 2019 - link
i8 processor I do one! If I've got one I'll rock the world!Jon Tseng - Sunday, February 10, 2019 - link
On the positive side it can also pull double duty as a heater for your man cave! :-pPeachNCream - Sunday, February 10, 2019 - link
The TDP doesn't change with the addition of a large heatsink. A heavily loaded mobile CPU in the NUC won't really contribute much to the temperature of even a small room regardless of whether there's a stock HSF or a passive metal block attached to it.If you're looking for PCs doubling as a source of heat, you're better off going for a high TDP desktop processor and one or more mid- to high-end GPUs. You'll approach 400W TDP from those collective parts and possibly feel more of a difference in said man cave.
zmatt - Tuesday, February 12, 2019 - link
I think I have an old P4 Prescott under the stairs in the basement. That should do the trick.zez3 - Sunday, November 17, 2019 - link
I've got the X8 case and the Galactico and there is a big difference between the two. With galactico you get the heat-pipes(those in the picture) with which my older nuc on full load the temp averages ~50C.The X8 with the new nuc generation is no where near that(perhaps cuz of the new design pipe-less) and the cpu on full load is skyrocketing ~85C. I will try to re-paste the thermal cream but I doubt that will bring a big change.
Does anyone know if the Turing is also pipe-less ?