Hi all!
I've been working on this idea for a while now and I was hoping to see what people thought of it! It originally came to me after using motherboards with SSD slots behind the processor where the SSD would overheat and eventually have a shorter lifespan because of it. I've done some prototyping and all but I am just trying to test the waters to see if this is even something anybody would want.
Essentially this is a blower system to pressurise a small chamber which then forces high(er) pressure air through a tubing network and to specific components. I have found that many smaller components that have heatsinks but no fans (like SSDs, FPGAs, Tensor Units, etc) become thermal reservoirs rather than heat dissipation devices actually dramatically increasing the temperature of the device. Many devices that I see now have tiny fans on them which are most often overkill. If their fins had any airflow at all (as opposed to the stagnant air between large components and in odd spots) they would perform fine. With this device, one regular-sized driving fan would be able to cool many devices while remaining at a reasonable noise level at the expense of a little more space. Additionally, multiple blower ends could be designed for whatever specific component needs to be cooled and they would be relatively small and cheap and could even be 3d printed (Although with small components 3d printers may struggle). Most M.2 devices for example could use a universal blower end.
Please let me know what you all think, I look forward to any feedback! Please roast me if I have an awful idea. Have a great day!