That blue glow through the vent is like a PC case, subtle like a ton of bricks. I don't see sony doing this but they might add a line for accent somewhere.All that glowy stuff? No fear! It's also a dust trap with all those corners and crevices. I agree a good cool, quiet design is desirable, but it'd have to be pretty far removed from the SDK and that artist mockup to be a functional CE device.
while the sketch is maybe not that clear, i actually had fans the size similar of those on desktop GPUs in mind. Those should get the Job done with some efficiency?!
Where would a large fan fit in this design?
Since nobody understood the theory of operation so far, I can't tell whether it's stupid or genius yet.This design is mind-boggling. It's both stupid and ugly.
ghostbusters said:Egon Spengler: The structure of this roof cap is exactly like the kind of telemetry tracker that NASA uses to identify dead pulsars in deep space.
Ray Stantz: Cold-riveted girders...with cores of pure selenium.
Peter Venkman: Everybody getting this so far? So what? I guess they just don't make them like they used to, huh?
Ray Stantz: No! Nobody ever made them like this! I mean, the architect was either a certified genius or an authentic wacko!
It could be as straightforward as 1 part of the V is for PSU, the other part for the mainboard. A clever design is what they have today in which 1 fan is responsible for cooling both.If this box exists as a devkit, maybe they used two tangential fans/crossflow blowers, one on each side. They are not very efficient, but provide constant airflow. Maybe possible with a clever design?. Many small fans as others have said make a lot of high pitched noise to move enough air.
Without knowing how large the device is... I'm not necessarily sure that would be true.I can see Sony using this for a dev kit but a consumer console?
I can see Sony doing this on a dev kit for novelty and overclocking the hell out of the kit.
But a consumer console needing this much cooling that it literally takes up half of the console seems a bit much. This shit looks like it could cool an array of apus.
I can see Sony using this for a dev kit but a consumer console?
I can see Sony doing this on a dev kit for novelty and overclocking the hell out of the kit.
But a consumer console needing this much cooling that it literally takes up half of the console seems a bit much. This shit looks like it could cool an array of apus.
All that glowy stuff? No fear! It's also a dust trap with all those corners and crevices. I agree a good cool, quiet design is desirable, but it'd have to be pretty far removed from the SDK and that artist mockup to be a functional CE device.
We have a drive slot bottom-left. That makes this a Big Box.Without knowing how large the device is...
No kidding. Especially when you know people who are actually careless enough to allow their cats to sit and sleep on top of their consoles and electronic components.
Yeah maybe, but I have problem to see how they could implement one big fan with that deep V design. The air as I see it must come in at the sidewalls of the V and out on each side and back. If you mount one big fan under the v, the bottom of the v will cover much of the fan's airflow. The console seems to low for having big fans vertically. I just try to think (I am an engineer) how it could work, but then again maybe I am wasting my time on a non existent box...lol.It could be as straightforward as 1 part of the V is for PSU, the other part for the mainboard. A clever design is what they have today in which 1 fan is responsible for cooling both.