Monday, November 23 2009
PC cooling products specialist Evercool introduced its Armor case-mounted HDD cooler. The cooler acts as a drive-cage, converting 5.25" drive bays into 3.5" bays, and directs air onto three 3.5" hard drives, while occupying two 5.25" bays. It comes with a metal front bezel with perforated metal for the intake. Bezel colors include black and silver. Internally, the drive cage is made entirely of steel. Air is blown onto the drives by a 2 ball-bearing 80mm fan running at 1200 RPM. The perforated front air intake is detachable without dissembling the cage, it lets you clean the dust-filter and the fan. Its pricing and availability are not known.



Source: VR-Zone
posted by btarunr - 5:59 PM |  Related News

User comments
by MRCL (November 23rd - 6:41 PM) - Reply
That looks more like and internal toaster for me, despite that 80mm fan. There is hardly any gap between the drives.
by theonedub (November 23rd - 6:45 PM) - Reply
Dual low noise fans and loose the front logo please.
by t77snapshot (November 23rd - 7:10 PM) - Reply
I don't understand the point of some hdd clooign cages for desktop case because most towers already have front intake fans for the hdd's
by Izliecies (November 23rd - 8:39 PM) - Reply
This in a Lancool PC-K58 case with a taken out HDD cage = win.
by tonyd223 (November 23rd - 8:50 PM) - Reply
I have one of these from like 8 years ago - not a new idea methinks. and bump on the toast your drives thing - far too close together...
by hat (November 23rd - 8:51 PM) - Reply
Aren't hard drives supposed to run warm to function properly?
by MRCL (November 23rd - 9:05 PM) - Reply
by: hat
Aren't hard drives supposed to run warm to function properly?
I think I read somewhere that the ideal temps for HDs are around 40 degrees Celsius. And yes, a HD that runs too cold is more likely to fail and has a shorter lifespan. This is why I don't understand people who watercool their hard drives.

However, if you have many harddrives so close together, some airflow is good, because it gets very hot very quickly. And in this thing, the gap is so narrow, that 80mm fan will only have a marginal cooling effect.
by FreedomEclipse (November 23rd - 11:33 PM) - Reply
shame its an 80mm fan,
by Kaleid (November 24th - 1:28 AM) - Reply
by: FreedomEclipse
shame its an 80mm fan,
I don't mind that as much as this:
1200 RPM
unnecessarily high RPM
by FreedomEclipse (November 24th - 2:34 AM) - Reply
by: Kaleid
I don't mind that as much as this:
1200 RPM
unnecessarily high RPM
thats my point - it should by 120mm@1200rpm
by a_ump (November 24th - 3:03 AM) - Reply
yea i'd personally never buy something like this cause i only roll with 1 hd, but besides that as others stated i too have read that HDD's are more likely to fail at low temps and if they don't they still perform more poorly than without cooling. Watercooling a drive? maybe SSD but those put out much heat?
by AsRock (November 24th - 3:10 AM) - Reply
Use one here but made by iStar and basically the same. 3 HDD is a no no even if the fan could do 5000RPM lol..

The fronts pretty much the same with same ideas how the filter fit on it and i took the whole front part of mine so i could just use the cases filters.

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16856999209&cm_re=istar-_-56-999-209-_-Product

by: FreedomEclipse
shame its an 80mm fan,


Then it would have to take 3 5 1/4 bays ;).
by Hayder_Master (November 24th - 7:37 AM) - Reply
it's cool but better if there is cage take more HDD with 12cm fan
by breakfromyou (November 24th - 8:08 AM) - Reply
i'm surprised you people didn't mention the IBM Deathstar drives in the pictures.
by Kaleid (November 24th - 8:40 AM) - Reply
by: FreedomEclipse
thats my point - it should by 120mm@1200rpm
Overkill. That is enough for highly overclocked CPU's and GPU's.
by Easo (November 24th - 9:35 AM) - Reply
by: breakfromyou
i'm surprised you people didn't mention the IBM Deathstar drives in the pictures.
Ah, the famous ones for dying?
Looks realy funny in 2009, all hdds on IDE.
by Mussels (November 24th - 12:04 PM) - Reply
by: MRCL
That looks more like and internal toaster for me, despite that 80mm fan. There is hardly any gap between the drives.


i've used many that use 120mm fans and pack the drives extremely close, the air blowing over the sides cools them exceptionally well.

hard drives only produce 5-15W of heat, so they only need minimal cooling



lol to IBM deathstars... I've got a hitachi one around here and its terrible (slow, noisy, hot)


edit: actually they're very honest, the name of the last Jpeg gives away the temps of those deathstars :D
by FreedomEclipse (November 24th - 12:27 PM) - Reply
by: Kaleid
Overkill. That is enough for highly overclocked CPU's and GPU's.
not really - Its really more about the sound, 80mm's tend to create quite a racket at higher RPM, Im not saying that 120mm dont do the same but they are less noiser at the same RPM

I have the 2 standard hard drive caddys which come with my Antec 902 - they are both 120mm & have a RPM controller which I can use to crank up the fan but it gets noisey as hell so i just leave it on the lowest setting. which is around 800rpm i think, Ive no idea what it is
by MRCL (November 24th - 2:10 PM) - Reply
by: Mussels
edit: actually they're very honest, the name of the last Jpeg gives away the temps of those deathstars :D
LOL that would be enough to cook an egg.
by Jizzler (November 24th - 2:52 PM) - Reply
I'm not too worried about the drives and fan - could just use 2 drives, or 3 slim drives.

But I do perfer like my Lian-Li EX-H34B. 3.5" x 4 in 5.25" x 3 with a rear 120mm fan. There's nearly a 1/4" between the drives, and the rear fan doubles as my CPU/RAM cooler.

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