Zalman's jet engine-inspired CPU cooler is now available

Daniel Sims

Posts: 1,997   +56
Staff
WTF?! Electronics with loud fans are often compared to jet engines, but Zalman deliberately designed its newest CPU cooler to resemble one. The Zet 5 is the latest in a series of flamboyant designs introduced this year. For some PC builders, fluorescent lighting is no longer enough.

Zalman's Zet 5 CPU cooler, initially showcased at Computex, is now available with a jet engine-style design for users seeking unique custom builds. Early bird pricing is available until August 25.

Although the copper and aluminum cooler might resemble a standard cylindrical CPU fan at first glance, it is mounted with annular fans positioned parallel to the processor, as if to propel the PC.

Its 120-millimeter dual-directional fans and outer shell conceal a 53-fin circular heatsink, which is soldered on top of a reverse direct touch heatpipe. The fan blades help reduce vibration.

Weighing 970 grams and measuring 130 by 117 by 158 millimeters, the Zet 5 should fit inside a standard tower case. It supports LGA 1851, LGA 1700, LGA 1200, LGA 115X, AM5, and AM4 sockets, making it compatible with recent generations of Intel and AMD CPUs.

Although the Zet 5 looks like a jet engine, it does not sound like one. According to its specifications, the cooler operates at a maximum noise level of between 20 and 40 db. Its maximum TDP is 200W, and it ships with ZM-STC10 thermal paste. Unsurprisingly, the cooler includes RGB lighting and supports motherboard lighting controls.

The Zet 5 is available in black and white. According to the Korean outlet Quasar Zone, early bird customers can purchase the black model for 67,000 won or the white model for 69,000 won (approximately $50). Starting August 25, prices for both models will increase by 10,000 won, or about $7.

Other companies have also introduced distinctive cooler designs in an effort to stand out in the custom PC market, often incorporating displays.

For example, Thermaltake's MAGCurve 360 Ultra ARGB Sync AIO liquid cooler includes an L-shaped 6.67-inch AMOLED 2,400 x 1,080 screen, while the MAGFloe 360/240 features a square 3.95-inch 480 x 480 LCD screen. Users can upload content to the screens or display media and diagnostic information using desktop and mobile apps.

Meanwhile, Jonsbo's TF3-360SC series includes four front-facing displays within the fan frames and on the pump block. Looking ahead, the next generation of CPU coolers may include holographic elements, such as the ones Coolify recently demonstrated using 96 spinning LED arrays.

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One day somebody will wake up, smell the coffee that was made for them, a light bulb moment, when cooling will be revelutionised instead of a fan that cools well and pumps all the hot air into the case too fast for the case fans to extract ....the light bulb will dim a little and then bright idea will come, a extraction system that actually sucks out hot air directly off the Cpu to outside the case, not hard...just $5 for tubing the size of the fan straight out the case, no more heat left in the case...
 
One day somebody will wake up, smell the coffee that was made for them, a light bulb moment, when cooling will be revelutionised instead of a fan that cools well and pumps all the hot air into the case too fast for the case fans to extract ....the light bulb will dim a little and then bright idea will come, a extraction system that actually sucks out hot air directly off the Cpu to outside the case, not hard...just $5 for tubing the size of the fan straight out the case, no more heat left in the case...
This was a very long post to say "could someone make a duct to shoot the hot air coming out of a CPU cooler directly outside of the case?"
 
Always amazes me to see these companies churning out one air cooler after another.
Sure I must have owned 25+ air coolers during my nerd "career" BUT when I built my most recent box two years-or-so ago I went for an AIO watercooling system.
Cost about the same as a good quality air cooling system but it definitely works better and is almost silent. And the inside of the case stays cool too.
The days that my significant other complained about airport-style noise in the living room are long gone. I will never go back.
 
Always amazes me to see these companies churning out one air cooler after another.
Sure I must have owned 25+ air coolers during my nerd "career" BUT when I built my most recent box two years-or-so ago I went for an AIO watercooling system.
Cost about the same as a good quality air cooling system but it definitely works better and is almost silent. And the inside of the case stays cool too.
The days that my significant other complained about airport-style noise in the living room are long gone. I will never go back.
I also run an aio, they're great but do run the risk of breaking and spilling liquid on something and killing the system. very slim but still a chance.
 
Always amazes me to see these companies churning out one air cooler after another.
Sure I must have owned 25+ air coolers during my nerd "career" BUT when I built my most recent box two years-or-so ago I went for an AIO watercooling system.
Cost about the same as a good quality air cooling system but it definitely works better and is almost silent. And the inside of the case stays cool too.
The days that my significant other complained about airport-style noise in the living room are long gone. I will never go back.
Always amazes me that when someone makes a change to a different type of product, they cannot comprehend that the market is greater than themselves, nor why people would want the product they bought previously.

I used to rock an AIO, that was until the pump noise started and the leaks came hunting. Dont forget you need room for a 240mm AIO, as 120mm AIOs perform worse then most high end air coolers. Meanwhile, my hyper 212+ is over 15 years old and still works perfectly. Show me an AIO from 2010 that still functions with no maintenance.
 
I've been using AIO for my CPU for over 10 years. I swear by them - along with AIO GPU.

If the AIO does fail the system shuts down after an overheat warning giving you time to replace it. I've not had this problem but I recognize anything can possibly break.

I prefer AIO to these CPU fans.
 
Only Zalman cooler I ever used was the 9500A. I though it was unique looking with all the copper fins.

Otherwise it's been Cooler Master air coolers such as the Hyper 212/212+ and the V8 and a couple of Noctua such as the U9/U12 models or Corsair AIOs. I can't say that this jet engine looking one does anything for me....it looks cheap and plastic from the pictures.
 
I guess gigabytes patent ran out because they made a smaller version of this back in 2003 it had blue LEDs was made for socket 462
 
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