Enermax's New, Colorful, And Shiny Case Fans
Here are details on four fan models the Taiwanese component manufacturer plans to release by the end of the year, all carrying the "Vegas" moniker to highlight the line's flashy LED-driven styling.
Enermax went high-profile at Computex 2010, showcasing a blocky person made out of its new fans to attract visitors. We obliged, if only out of curiosity.
Here are details on four fan models the Taiwanese component manufacturer plans to release by the end of the year, all carrying the "Vegas" moniker to highlight the line's flashy LED-driven styling.
Apollish Vegas
Obvious misspelling (or an attempt at clever branding) aside, the Apollish Vegas is quite the monochromatic fan. Provisions are available for fan speed control, and LED lighting. Users can alternate between constant, moving, or oscillating light patterns (seven total).
On display were red, green, and blue variants—with the fan case matching the light color—but the company rep also said silver and gold variants would be available.
The Apollish Vegas is already on sale in Japan, but the rest of the world will have to wait until the end of June as Enermax begins ramping up production. Available form factors will be 120 and 140 mm.
T.B. Vegas 3C and 2C
Unlike the Apollish, the T.B. series fan case is black. But the model will feature three different light colors (red, green, and blue), acting in unison or alternately, with the LED lights also under the direct control of the user. Fourteen patterns will be available, specifically those that use all three colors, a combination of two, or just one.
Enermax aims to release the T.B. Vegas 3C by October, with a supposed worst-case scenario of Novemeber 2010. Available form factors will be 120 mm-only.
Nearly identical to its 3C, the T.B. Vegas 2C displays only two colors compared to its more colorful counterpart. We only saw a red-blue combination at the booth. Enermax, however, plans to release this fan in a variety of form factors, with specific sizes of 80, 90, 120, and 140 millimeters respectively.
The T.B. Vegas 2C is also set for a release this October at the earliest, and November 2010 by the latest.
Enermax's "USB Fan"
Also on display was a USB-powered case fan—but enclosed in a silicon sheath that has small magnets at the end. Apparently, the idea was to let users quickly apply a fan to the side of their metallic PC cases if they needed extra cooling. We're not sure, though, if using magnets so close to your hardware is a good idea. The rep assured us that they weren't strong enough to cause any damage.
Enermax's marketing folks haven't come up with a label, so we'll see if this so-called "USB fan" is safe for use when it his the market. Project release date is as same as the T.B. Vegas fans (October-November 2010).
Reflecting LEDs On Curved Blades
The common theme of these three colorful Enermax fans is the configuration of the LED lighting in relation to the blades. The lights line the ring surrounding the blades. The beams they produce then shine on the curved surfaces of the blades, with the intersection creating the colored lines. The configuration is apparently unique enough in the industry, as the marketing rep threw the word "patented" around.
As for prices, we've inquired with Enermax and are waiting for an email from the company. To those who want to figure out their build budgets for 2010, stay tuned for updates.
- Turbine's LOTRO Goes Free This Fall
- Deals for June 4: Logitech Mice, Remote, Keyboard
- HP: No, No, We ARE in the Smartphone Market
- Touchscreen PCs: 3 Things to Change
- COMPUTEX: World of Warcraft on Moorestown
- Google Lets You Put Your Face on Google.com
- Interview With a Booth Babe
- Six Tech Companies Join Up to Boost Linux
- HUGE Ereader Packs Two 14.1-inch LCDs
- Intel Makes a... High Tech Vending Machine?
- Silverstone Makes Super Dense, Compact Al Case
- Silverstone's New $500+ Behemoth Case
- Pixel Qi is the LCD Screen Type We're Waiting For
- Intel's Core i7 Solution for Shopping at the Mall
- Valve: Big Surprise Isn't Episode 3 (Booooo!)
- Toshiba Notebook Does 3D Blu-ray Movies
- Windows 7 SP1 Beta Coming Soon
- How Not to Announce New iPhone Data Plans











They certainly look the part, although i'm not a huge fan of LED fans, well i'd like them more if they come with an LED off switch. But what kind of speeds do these fans run at?
The white ones look very nice in my opinion.
CFM & db?
Can they play Crysis?
Thus my view that this year's computex theme is ugly cases is reinforced...
EDIT: It's ok, the BitFenix cases this year look hot!
Can they play Crysis?
How could they? THERE FANS!
How could they? THERE FANS!
You don't get sarcasm, do you?
You don't get sarcasm, do you?
Yes I do but it still freaking stupid.
Quite like the idea of the 'stick on' fan, although why it needs to be USB powered is a mystery to me.
Could be handy.
Too many humourless morons, voting me down only proves my point.
@ kampanna
I willing to bet you own Apple products.
Sorry I meant @ Userremoved
Other than an iPod no so shut it.