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AirJet showcases 50% performance boost, larger battery and silent operation in Samsung Galaxy Book4 Edge

Started by Redaktion, December 30, 2024, 17:28:20

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Redaktion

Better performance and battery life coupled with virtually silent operation: this is exactly what the AirJet Mini promises to deliver in thin and light laptops. Using a Samsung Galaxy Book4 Edge 14 equipped with a Snapdragon X Elite, Frore Systems demonstrates the potential advantages of this cooling technology.

https://www.notebookcheck.net/AirJet-showcases-50-performance-boost-larger-battery-and-silent-operation-in-Samsung-Galaxy-Book4-Edge.939098.0.html

Max Power

If this contraption is so good, how come no laptop manufacturer has adopted it? All we've seen for years now are one-off demonstration mods made to an existing laptop.

heffeque

12w to 18w power consumption... Green arrow up instead of red.

Samsung, we know that you treat your clients as if they were dumb, but that's just laughing at them a bit too much.

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Edit: OK it seems that "Performance" is mislabeled in the graph and should read "Power Dissipation" (face-palm)

Pix

Quote from: Max Power on December 31, 2024, 03:00:39If this contraption is so good, how come no laptop manufacturer has adopted it? All we've seen for years now are one-off demonstration mods made to an existing laptop.
It's probably for the usual reasons: Existing supply chains, lower costs for current solutions, and unwillingness to gamble on an emerging technology at scale. Companies are naturally risk averse and often take years to implement new standards, even if and when the new options are superior. These cooling solutions seem to be fairly low volume at the moment, meaning the time and difficulty to scale production would require significant investment, until which the fans are almost definitely going to be cheaper. Related to this, the availability of such fans is currently widespread - going through the costs of re-engineering your product for this new technology, adapting new production lines, and then hoping you can get a stable supply at sufficient scale to meet your needs is a tough pill to swallow.

Mj

Quote from: Max Power on December 31, 2024, 03:00:39If this contraption is so good, how come no laptop manufacturer has adopted it? All we've seen for years now are one-off demonstration mods made to an existing laptop.

It's because of efficiency. It's a cool concept dont get me wrong, but compared to a fan you're using a lot more electricity for a little bit of airflow. Dave 2d just made a video covering this in depth.

heffeque

Quote from: Mj on January 01, 2025, 13:25:00
Quote from: Max Power on December 31, 2024, 03:00:39If this contraption is so good, how come no laptop manufacturer has adopted it? All we've seen for years now are one-off demonstration mods made to an existing laptop.

It's because of efficiency. It's a cool concept dont get me wrong, but compared to a fan you're using a lot more electricity for a little bit of airflow. Dave 2d just made a video covering this in depth.

Yup! Here's a graph:
Here

furiousbanker

Yeah, those airjets are inefficient as hell. They need that increased battery size and then some alright. Here four mini airjets would consume 1W each at full load meaning 4W in total. That would absolutely tank the battery life hard under load and make it significantly worse at any load when they are on.

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