Thursday, May 19th 2022

GeIL Launches Actively Cooled DDR5 Memory with Dual RGB Fans

GeIL, is excited to announce the market launch of its EVO V DDR5 RGB Hardcore Gaming Memory kits providing high-frequency modules ranging from 4800 MHz to 6600 MHz and available in large kit capacities of 32 GB to 64 GB. The unique heatspreader design features active cooling and fascinating RGB lighting effects and is available in titanium gray or glacier white color themes.

GeIL EVO V DDR5 RGB Hardcore Gaming Memory offers unparalleled memory performance and stability to meet the intensive demand of hardcore gamers and overclockers across Intel's latest platforms. GeIL has crafted a break-through cooling solution for EVO V modules that integrates a stunning RGB light bar and two micro cooling fans into a single molded aluminium heatshield. Most importantly, the physical height of the heatspreader allows it to be compatible with most CPU coolers on the market without any mechanical interference.
The heatspreader comes in two color options, titanium gray and glacier white,perfectly matching the most popular color themes of high-end motherboards and desktop PC components.Two cooling fans are located in the heatshield's upper right and left corners and provide extra airflow to keep the modules operating in an ideal thermal range. The dual-fan cooling heatshield can provide approximately 45% more thermal dissipation than traditional.

The exceptional architecture of the DDR5 memory is based on locked/unlocked PMIC (Power Management Integrated Circuit), which can provide threshold protection, synchronized voltage monitoring, smart voltage control, and power management to achieve a more comprehensive voltage control under normal and overclocked conditions.

Additionally, the on-chip ECC function enables active error correction to improve data integrity and enhance memory performance and stability.The GeIL EVO V supports the latest Intel XMP 3.0 profiles for precision and stability to auto overclocking, giving users more accessible access to customize and tweaking memory performance. Each module uses strictly sorted ICs and memory chips to offer excellent signal integrity and system performance reliability.

Availability

Backed by the limited lifetime warranty, the GeIL EVO V DDR5 RGB Hardcore Gaming Memory will be available in July in major retailers worldwide with speeds from 4800 MHz to 6600 MHz at 1.10 to 1.35 V and capacities from 32 GB to 64 GB.
Source: GeIL
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41 Comments on GeIL Launches Actively Cooled DDR5 Memory with Dual RGB Fans

#26
Valantar
BlaylockAnybody else notice the airflow in the middle image is all over the place? One fan rotates clockwise but the air comes out CCW. LOL Also this is a horrible idea.
"Blower"/radial fans actually work both ways, as they take in air from the front/back and kick it out sideways, where there should then be ducting directing airflow. Whether the fins are swept with or against the direction of rotation is a tradeoff of pressure, noise and airflow.
Posted on Reply
#27
TheLostSwede
News Editor
BlaylockAnybody else notice the airflow in the middle image is all over the place? One fan rotates clockwise but the air comes out CCW. LOL Also this is a horrible idea.
That's what happens when you have a design team that doesn't understand the product.
Posted on Reply
#28
MachineLearning
TheLostSwedeThat's what happens when you have a design team that doesn't understand the product.
I think that the mere idea of wind will push more CFM than these tiny 10mm fans.
Posted on Reply
#29
TheLostSwede
News Editor
MachineLearningI think that the mere idea of wind will push more CFM than these tiny 10mm fans.
Are you saying that you fart in the general direction of your RAM to cool it?
Posted on Reply
#30
MachineLearning
TheLostSwedeAre you saying that you fart in the general direction of your RAM to cool it?
Look, I'm no engineer, it's the best I can muster...
Posted on Reply
#31
Sabishii Hito
zlobbyWhen was the last time we needed active RAM cooling?
You must not overclock RAM past XMP.
Posted on Reply
#32
zlobby
Sabishii HitoYou must not overclock RAM past XMP.
With me at least it's simple - I save time and energy by buying the fastest kit possible. This way I gain all the MT/s with a flip of a switch, it's stable and I save ton of time for troubleshooting.

My OCD (OverClocking Days) ended with the Athlon era. I've tried this and that during the years but mostly for the lulz.
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#33
Sabishii Hito
zlobbyWith me at least it's simple - I save time and energy by buying the fastest kit possible. This way I gain all the MT/s with a flip of a switch, it's stable and I save ton of time for troubleshooting.

My OCD (OverClocking Days) ended with the Athlon era. I've tried this and that during the years but mostly for the lulz.
Oh I generally don't OC my daily setup, I have a bench system for that.
Posted on Reply
#34
zlobby
Sabishii HitoOh I generally don't OC my daily setup, I have a bench system for that.
For me computers were a hobby, a passion, a teacher, an enterntainment. Now, they are mostly tools. A means to an end, if you wish.

I have zero time and zero need to OC. Oh, how a man changes!
Posted on Reply
#35
ir_cow
I figured someone would add a fan. DDR5 starts to need a fan once you crank the voltage and or higher frequencies.
Posted on Reply
#36
trsttte
ValantarAlso, doesn't the airflow path here strongly imply that there isn't contact between the PMIC and heatsink? If there was, there wouldn't be a path for air to pass over it after all.
That reminds me of this beauty, Macbook Air 2020, if you're asking where's the heat pipe that connects the heatsink to the fan, you're using it wrong :D

Posted on Reply
#37
zlobby
trsttteThat reminds me of this beauty, Macbook Air 2020, if you're asking where's the heat pipe that connects the heatsink to the fan, you're using it wrong :D

Ah, classic!
Posted on Reply
#39
ThrashZone
Hi,
I have m.2 coolers with little blower style fans like this
They actually work pretty good.
Cooling a m.2 and cooling memory are a tad different though but is pretty :cool:
Posted on Reply
#40
zlobby
ThrashZoneHi,
I have m.2 coolers with little blower style fans like this
They actually work pretty good.
Cooling a m.2 and cooling memory are a tad different though but is pretty :cool:
If someone told me we'd need active cooling for our harddrives 10 years ago I'd probably laugh.
TiggerDid they deliberately not say how noisy the fans are?
That's how PR works. Usually.
TheLostSwedeThat's what happens when you have a design team that doesn't understand the product.
I am quite amazed (and amused, too) how many marketing guys have no clue what the product does and how it does it. It's especially funny in tech business.

Posted on Reply
#41
Mussels
Freshwater Moderator
Two small fans per RAM chip?


My god, imagine running 4 sticks of this from a kit when one fan fails or starts to get noisy...
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