SilverStone has introduced its new CPU cooler designed for ultra-thin PCs, such as thin mini-ITX as well as mini-STX systems. The cooling solution is as thin as an Intel coolers, but this one is rated to cool chips with up to 65 W TDP.

The SilverStone Nitrogon NT08-115XP CPU cooler has a core made of solid copper as a well as an aluminum radiator with bifurcated fins. The cooling system is equipped with a sleeve bearing fan with 1200 ~ 3400 RPM rotating speed that can create air flow of up to 16 CFM. The new Nitrogon NT08-115XP is 101 mm wide and 33 mm tall meaning that it is compatible with a variety of low-profile systems that do not have a lot of tall components around their CPU sockets. Despite its relatively small dimensions, the cooler is rated to a thermal conductivity for up to 65 W, a typical TDP of quad-core microprocessors with powerful integrated GPUs.

SilverStone positions its new Nitrogon-series cooler (SST-NT08-115XP) as a companion for its VT01 Mini-STX chassis, but the device can naturally be used for all the other ultra-thin PCs as well. In fact, the SST-NT08-115XP can be attached to any motherboard with Intel’s LGA1150/1151/1155/1156 socket, but in the vast majority of cases it will be used inside current-gen machines that are based on Intel’s Skylake or Kaby Lake processors in LGA1151 packaging.

SilverStone Nitrogon NT08 Specifications
  SST-NT08-115XP
CPU TDP 65 W
Material Copper center, extruded aluminum fins
Dimension with Fan 101 mm (W) × 33 mm (H) × 101 mm (D)
Air Pressure 0.3 ~ 2.43 mm H2O
Air Flow (CFM) 5.64 ~ 15.98CFM
Speed 1200 ~ 3400RPM
Noise 16.5 ~ 28.98 dBA
Type of Bearing Sleeve bearing
Life Expectancy 40,000 hours
Weight 292 grams

Intel itself bundles low-profile CPU coolers with its processors up to 65 W TDP. Such coolers lack a copper base and, as seen in our roundup of stock coolers, not the best solution available. Meanwhile, in previous years, the more power hungry parts have been shipped with larger cooling solutions that also lack copper for cost reasons and are generally noisy. By contrast, SilverStone’s Nitrogon coolers promise both 65 W thermal conductivity and relatively silent operation (at least, under light loads when the fans do not rotate at high speeds).

The SilverStone Nitrogon NT08-115XP CPU cooler is expected to hit the store shelves in the coming weeks. Exact pricing of the product is unknown, but its NT07-115X brother costs $33 in the U.S.

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Source: SilverStone

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  • nwarawa - Monday, December 12, 2016 - link

    I think Anato's analogy is rather apt. You are confusing sleeve bearings with, lets call them, modified sleeve bearings. Those bearings actually have designs that pull the lubricant back to the center when spun.
  • nwarawa - Monday, December 12, 2016 - link

    But to say "gravity doesn't effect it while spinning", indeed, shows an fundamental flaw in your understanding of basic physics.
  • xenol - Friday, December 9, 2016 - link

    Looks like it'll perform barely better, if at all, against Intel's stock cooler.
  • Samus - Sunday, December 11, 2016 - link

    The important thing to note is Intel coolers generally have pretty good fans. I've never seen one go bad, even when the fins below are choke-full of dust.
  • willis936 - Monday, December 12, 2016 - link

    If nothing the intel cooler fans are very good at incising fingers.
  • JanW1 - Friday, December 9, 2016 - link

    "65 W thermal conductivity"? I somehow expected editors here to be not too lazy to write "thermal conductivity sufficiently low to dissipate 65 W" instead of measuring thermal conductivity in Watts.
  • yannigr2 - Wednesday, December 14, 2016 - link

    Price is $17.42 without the taxes. At least that's what I learned.

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