Singularity Computers was established by Daniel Cannon in 2007. It began as a hobby in 2000 and soon became more serious when Daniel founded a computer repair and custom PC building business. With a strong interest in water cooling and high end gaming PCs this soon became a speciality. After creating our KZread Channel in 2011 we soon moved from local to international customers. In 2012 we began designing our own custom water cooling components which would become the first of our products in 2014. After the launch of our products we started on a new path investing most of our time and resources into product development. With the launch of our first case Spectre in 2018 interest in our creations grew which allowed us to focus even more closely on research and development. Our goal is to advance water cooling with a focus on integration and the future of the PC Chassis.
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Your voice reminds me of Ayrton Senna and that warms my heart, lol.
i dont know what say except that is an absolute work of art.
model name / brand of the case?
Awesome build.
Damm, that's incredible.
When you discover that you don't want to play anymore and just build the PC!
I know why you don’t, but I miss the full build log videos.
This.
beautiful
Sweeeeeeetttt rigggg!❤
Im from 7 years into the future and this is the only guide worth a damn
I received and installed the Mini-Node today. It works excellently and is very easy to use. I doubt anyone would need the Mega-Node, as 150W should be sufficient for most users. Currently, I am running 12 T30 120mm fans (push-pull configure on 2 x360 rads), 2 140mm fans, 2 D5 pumps, and a Razer RGB hub from the Mini-Node without any issues.
I want to buy this case but hope you guys can clarify me something....frontal distro plate is included like in this video? Purchasing only case on yout website.
This is excellent, thank you for creating this vid. The phrase “it’s all estimation” really put things into perspective for me (and likely many others).
For easily more than a decade, I've been running my computer using an external 1977 Pontiac Bonneville without air conditioning heater core with 2 Noctua 140 mm fans and a shroud made of cardboard. I actually have a video uploaded here of when I ran the radiator with a fountain pump to cool my old xbox 360. The radiator is the only original thing from that setup and it is now only used to cool my RTX 3080ti video card and an AIO is used to cool my 13700k CPU.
Spent 10k only for cooling ... why not😂
Greetings from 2024! I've got this bad boy new-in-box in the garage. I guess it's time to build a PC :)
Makes me miss old school Halo before 343 and Microsoft destroyed it. Nice build.
Very beautiful!!! 😍
I would like to see a set up as an example with the distro plate and rads.
This may be 10yrs old, yet is still very relevant today and helpful to understand overclocking. I may take a crack at my Rampage Iv Extreme and see how it goes. Thanks for the post. NYC.
That cpu cooler is meant for a forced air case (server case), so that cpu is going to run HOT without a fan on it. And those drives are going to run hot as well, because this case was designed by morons that decided to aim air at the drive cage, instead of THROUGH the drive cage... This is a "beautiful" build that ignores all practical problems.
300$ lol!
Where is the new channel
Would love to see a full feature breakdown of the absolute case. Very interested in getting one in the future but the details on the website are a bit light.
Isn't the 6/8-pin supplemental power just for the front IO USB-C header?
Great idea! Your test bench solves all of the niggling (and glaring) problems with my test bench. I'll have to keep an eye on your product. I use an Open Benchtable (not the mini) and it is set up for water-cooling. I have 240 x 45mm and a 360 x 45mm radiations on one end and a pump/res on the other. I ended up building some braces to support the radiators but it's still a tad ungainly. I use a Corsair Commander Pro & a Silverstone PWM controller to handle the temperature sensors and fan curves (I'm quite often using old hardware). As for the cables.... I'm using CableMod sleeved cables going back to a Corsair HX-1200i and there's quite the excess to deal with.
Look up the Benchlab, it even inputs everything it measures into HWMonitor.
This would match my Spectre 3 limited edition!!
You guys are absolutely cranking out some incredible stuff at the moment! Congrats!
Now you have to make it compatible for backside MB connectors.
Just use bigger standoffs.
Send it to Jayz two cents for a review and full wayercooled build Amazing product as always
Not much of a test bench with all the features more like open case.
hope you could do a buid on it thanks and that"s a good TB good job
No manual I got mine have been waiting to put it together
So you couldnt figure it out your self? Id almost argue you have no business owning a test bed if you need instructions on putting a few screws together.
Amazing❤
Far out amazing as always ❤ Enjoy the rest of your week and keep it up the great job 👍🏽
Hi Daniel.....well done! I can't find the manual yet to check the dimensions on the power board.
Great product, I would have liked to see an exemplary setup.
I have these and I like them. My only issue with the design is a lack of fill port on the top plate. It's the highest point in the system and that makes air removal a chore. Strongly recommend a minor update to the design to accommodate this.
When my Stream-M Dual, finally, ships will it have this built into its power-board?
Aquaero for dummies
can't wait to put this in the waterbox. keeps everything simple and straightforward. my kind of product for sure.
I love looking at stuff I can't afford and just wondering what it's like to look over and see this sitting on my desk
Dumb question but how is it different from having a Aquaero?
with an aquaero you still need to install the software and set up fan curves.
Man this is a sick piece of product design and engineering. I can't wait to get my hands on some of these. I love it every time you release a new product as you always manage to excite me with your innovation and your attention to the finer details on every level. Love it, absolutely love it ! ! !
Thinking about it, it would go against the intened simplicity of the controller. But can a microphone be attached to someone like this and it just ramps the fans up till it "hears" them. So that way givin whatever load the system is,itll try and stay as fast as possible. But i can understand how that could be very complicated without a microprocessor and some very clever code. To which the items in the video would do that no sweat and cheaper
more fan speed, more cooling, more noise more load, more heat, less pc speed. only thing a sound sensor would do is keep system under X noise decibel at cost of top performance Ooohhh, now I get it, for total Air cool system, just watercool it and get high quality fans
I like this, as ASUS in ca 2014 f-ed up their onboard fan and pump controls by one update, that they were in no hurry to fix. now I have 4xfan on each of my radiators with sata power fan PCB-8-WAY PWM, can I plug it to the TCTRL PWM Node and to Mini-Node this would let skip the glorified German fan hub, but have less temp sensor in put, but this would still be a win
stunning work
And we've come full circle, back to the fan controllers of old.
just more compact, you could put 2 Mega-Node into floppy 3.5 bay and have 2 knobs for 32 fans and 2 knobs for 4 pumps vs 5.25 inch bay 4 knobs fans controller
And we never should have left them, really. If companies had made smaller versions of their fan controllers, they'd sell pretty well, I think. Instead we've had to rely on terrible software solutions.
Honestly, I think rather than a potentiometer, going the same route as VIA keyboards would be better. No downloadable software on your PC, just a web interface that you can access, flash your settings, then forget. Potentiometers are fine, but having a GUI with a fan curve would be better.
The progress you and your Team have made in the last two years is very amazing. Thanks, Daniel ❤