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Thermaltake Massive 20 RGB Steel Mesh Panel Single 200mm Fan 10"‐19" Laptop Notebook Cooling Pad CL‐N014‐PL20SW‐A

  • Based on 4,485 reviews
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Availability: In Stock.
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Arrives Wednesday, Jun 4
Order within 15 hours and 14 minutes
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Style: Panel


Features

  • Set lights and fan speeds effortlessly: Control lights and fan easily via the builtin control panel including light mode button, color mode button and fan speed knob
  • Supreme ventilation: Steel mesh surface with an integrated 200 millimeter silent fan for optimal airflow and high thermal performance
  • Ergonomic comfort: Ergonomically designed with 3 adjustable height settings (3/ 9 /13) for the best viewing and typing angle
  • Designed for 19 inches gaming notebooks: Utilized a large metal mesh surface to support up to 19 inches gaming laptops

Description

Light up your gaming laptops with 256 colors: Bring the right atmosphere to your every gaming moment by choosing any of the 5 present light modes.

Color: RGB


Brand: Thermaltake


Material: Plastic


Item Weight: 3.4 Pounds


Product Dimensions: 18.54"L x 13.96"W x 1.83"H


Product Dimensions: 18.5 x 14 x 1.5 inches


Item Weight: 3.38 pounds


Item model number: CL-N014-PL20SW-A


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer: No


Date First Available: November 13, 2017


Manufacturer: Thermaltake USA Direct


Country of Origin: China


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Wednesday, Jun 4

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Great cooler and highly recomended for increased performance!
Style: Portable
Updated (Please see bottom): I have a Dell Studio 1535 Laptop. I've never pushed my laptop hardware to the limits before and it will still get really hot over time but not slow down. So then why would I need a laptop cooler? Well, about 6 months ago I purchased StarCraft II. My laptop's specs: 4 GB 667MHz RAM Intel Core 2 Duo T8100 2.1 GHz Dual Core CPU ATI Radeon HD Mobility 3450 256MB GPU 1440x900 resolution 15.6" screen When playing StarCraft II I needed to set everything onto low settings (shaders to low, all lighting to low, effects to low, physics off, textures to low, and run at 1280x800 resolution). Even with everything low, my laptop got blistering hot and the framerate would drop significantly to 20fps or lower in more taxing gameplay making the experience difficult to play. The heat was incredible as well. My hand rests left of the touchpad in order to hotkey and that location gets burning hot. I realized I needed a cooler. I looked between the 3 different Thermaltake coolers at the time and decided on this one. I have my USB Hub connecting my printer, mouse, and other items plugged into one of the USB ports on the cooler, while the other USB plug goes to my laptop. This way when I connect the cooler to sit down, all my devices are connected as well which is great, it is basically a dock. The cooling is also incredible on how well it improved my system. Now I can't give you any temperatures but I can tell you how drastically my experience improved. I went from running the lowest settings on StarCraft II with bad framerate drops and a blistering hot computer to being able to bump my effects to medium and physics to low (my gpu bottlenecks my computer so I still keep the graphic settings to low), my computer is cool to the touch on the underside and the spot where my hand rests is warm instead of blistering hot, and my framerate never drops below 30fps whenever I play (even during 3 vs 3) making my experience much more enjoyable and easier to manage. I highly recommend this if you want to cool down your laptop and improve performance. Heat isn't good for the hardware and most laptops can't dissipate heat very well at all. This is the perfect size for 15.6" laptops or less (anything bigger will overhang the cooler), and the 2 USB ports allow you to connect your USB dock into the cooler making the cooler a hub (you will need the USB ports on your laptop to be on the left or back, if they are only on the right you will need a USB extension to connect the cooler). Lastly, you will not need to worry about the noise of the fan, although it is powerful and large, it is very quiet. Quieter than my laptop's internal fan. Update: Now that I use certain programs like CPUID Hardware Monitor, I can give definitive numbers and shed light on an alternitive route. Withoug my cooler, playing StarCraft II. I could get my CPUs to upwards of 180*F while they would sit idle at about 120*F. My GPU would climb as high as 205*F under max stress and would sit idle at 160*F. These numbers are terrible in the computer world, especially for a laptop. By adding the cooler, my GPU would get no higher than 190*F, I cannot remember the CPU though. However, I no longer need to use my cooler and can even run StarCraft II at my monitor's native resolution of 1440x900. The thing is, my computer is 3 years old. That means the thermal paste is 2.5 years older than it should be. I opened up my laptop, removed the heatsink/fan assembly and used ArctiClean to remove the old dried out thermal paste and disgusting thermal pads from the CPU/GPU/Northbridge/VRAM. I cleaned the heatsink and dusted the fan and computer the best I could with can of aerosol compressed air. I then applied Arctic Silver thermal paste (which I had left over from two other computers that magically worked when applying new thermal paste: My Xbox 360 and a 12 year old Windows 98 dekstop that used a Slot 1 CPU). Once that was taken care of I reattached the heatsink/fan and closed it up. Be ready to be amazed... my max temperatures under max load now (when playing StarCraft II) are CPU 140*F and my GPU 170*F and this is without using the cooling pad. With the cooling pad, no difference so actually it doesn't help anymore. My computer runs cooler and no longer gets crazy hot on the wrist rests and the fan never runs max anymore unless playing a game. My idle temps are much much better too. CPU is 85*F and GPU is 127*F. That is a huge difference. So, as a recommendation. Yes, this is a great Laptop Cooling Pad, but, if you're computer is old, even only 1 year old, and it is running hot and the fan is always blasting, it maybe cheaper and much more effective to replace the thermal paste on the chips. If you do not know how to do this, seek help from a friend with tech skills or go to youtube (which is actually very helpful). Update #2: I still recommend this cooler over a year later. I have since bought a new laptop, a really high performance Clevo P150EM, which has dedicated cooling for each the GPU and CPU. The thing is a beast and is designed to cool crazy temperatures. I still use the Dell though. I don't game with it at all but I do dock it to my desk by plugging in external speakers, ethernet, a monitor, keyboard, and mouse. Essentially I use it like a desktop. It is more or less my media computer now used primarily for music, internet browsing, and backing up data from my other laptop. I leave the Dell on 24/7 now with the screen down sitting on the Thermaltake cooler. Since I live in a dorm room at the moment, everything is in one room. The fan is always running and I never notice it, yet it does a great job at cooling. I haven't changed the thermalpaste in forever and don't plan to anytime soon. For what my laptop needs, it gets the job done. My current idle temps just using internet browsing: CPU 100*F (38*C), GPU 145*F (63*C), HDD 91*F (33*C), Mobo 110*F (44*C). My final summation, it all depends on your laptop that you are using. It may need a thermalpaste reapplication, it may need a heatsink reseating, it may be fine and you're worried about exhaust air (exhaust air should be hot, it is an issue if the laptop is), it may need a cooling pad, it may be a combo of things. Most gaming laptops don't need a cooling pad since they are designed to cool high temps on their own. Multimedia and everyday use laptops may need a cooling pad if they run hot, especially on non-hardware intensive tasks like internet browsing. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on March 11, 2011 by Christian

  • ThermalTake Massive23 laptop/notebook cooler: An odd name but solid product - RECOMMENDED
Style: Portable
While CoolerMaster has a slight edge on customer reviews and major variety offering of their coolers, I chose ThermalTake. And after the first cooler arrived, I quickly ordered a second (I have two very large, heavy 17.3" widescreen Toshibas). Simplistic in its design: No moving parts except for the fan and LED light on/off buttons. Molded handgrips are provided on the side so I can easily pick up the cooler and laptop together and move them someplace else. Cooler is lightweight, sturdy, has a nice satin finish on the plastic sides and gloss black on the center perforated aluminum deck. The deck's nose (nearest you), is nicely rounded, does not interfere with keyboarding, and requires NO fittings or fixtures to keep your machine in place. A seemingly perfect bevel back to front makes keyboarding easy on the wrists, yet with no mechanical adjustment hardware to ... adjust or mess with. This bevel is the same as found on most conventional keyboards. BTW: the underside is a clear arch, allowing you to route your various cables, power cord, or what have under the deck without any problem, nothing to snag. I opted for the ThermalTakes large pancake center-mounted fan, massive and oversized and ultra-quiet as advertised. It runs slower than a set of smaller fans and therefore quieter, yet seems to deliver a large amount of air without a whirlwind under the notebook. I've been around PC fans enough to know the smaller they are, the more you need and/or the faster they run to push through sufficient air to cool your machine. This translates to noise. The power draw for the cooler is a nominal 0.2a, well within the range of a standard USB 2.0 port, no need to use a special charging port, or a USB 3.0 port. I am unimpressed with any and all of the available coolers on the market offering trendy blue LED underlighting, but have come to appreciate knowing when the fan is on. (yes, the fan LED light have separate and independent switches, but if you power your cooler from your standard PC's USB port, turning off your PC turns off your cooler. How cool is that?) The cooler provides 2 USB ports in the back/left corner, one for powering the cooler (a nice 18" USB cord comes with the cooler), and an adjacent USB port to make up for the notebook port you lost to power the cooler. Net USB port loss: zero. Also a handy cubby w/door on the backside of the cooler holds your cooler's USB cord when not in use. My favorite features of this new cooler involve my Toshibas: the cooler's deck provides four (4) rubber grippers embedded on the corners. These run side-to-side, whereas the rubber feet on my Toshiba run front-to-rear. The cooler's pads are sized and placed such that I have a positive match on all four (4) corners, the notebook refuses to move unless I tilt the cooler deck to around 30 degrees at which point my heavy notebook starts to slide. The deck is sturdy, smooth, lightweight, rubber feet keep the cooler from moving until YOU move it. My very large Toshiba (16.3 inches wide) overhangs the edges of the cooler deck about 3/4-inch on each side; therefore I think it should handle most any laptop/notebook except for the little ones; I think any notebook smaller than 14" may not be a good match for this cooler, which measures 14.75 inches wide by 11.75 inches deep, back height 2-inches and front height 1-inch. I do not power my coolers from the notebooks, but instead purchased a 6-foot standard USB cable for each, and power the cooler from a wall outlet driven USB charger port. This provides one additional USB port nearby my machine for charging my cellphone or some accessory I may want to attach to my notebook, such as speakers. Finally, this cooler can be tossed into a suitcase or backpack or large notebook case or bag (not sleeves, sorry), nothing to snag or catch on, just clean and simple and effective. RECOMMENDED ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on March 11, 2014 by just being Frank

  • Well it's got gamer aesthetic and does cool my laptop ( to an extent )
Style: Panel
Well guys I'm gonna make it simple. I bought it on black Friday 2020. PROS: 1.Looks fantabulous. 2.Light weight 3.Great quality product. 4.Got good enough lift from the surface and the hold up good ( sturdy) 5.QUIET ( cause of the single 200 mm fan ) CONS: 1. NOT ENOUGH COOLING 2. This thing is bigger than your avg cooling pad and no it wont fit in your typical 15 inch backpack. 3. THIS SHIT TAKES UP 2 USB SLOTS ( reccomend using a usb hub ) So guys if you're strictly looking for a laptop cooling pad which will cool down your temps drastically then this is not the one for you. Does this cooling pad work ?? Of course it does it does it soo sleek. I got a full metal built acer predator triton 300 so I know the need of a cooling pad and this thing does the job just fine with a gamer aesthetic ( RGB BABY ) on top. To more detailed info: It's got a big 200 mm fan which works like a ninja ( super quite compared to other cooling pads ). I just wish it got a bit more punch to the cooling at the same time I dont cause my triton 300 is a fighter jet taking off ( loud ). So its perfectly fine for me. When playing assassins creed odyssey with out the fan the temps went from 82°c to 86°c with the cooling pad on it stays at a FINE temps of 74 ° to 75 °c so this gives your laptop an avg cooling between 5 to 10°. You could get much better temps on a pad with more fans a much more RPM. CONCLUSION MUGGLES: Its works perfectly fine for my usage and for my laptop. if you got a quieter laptop and need more cooling, Then go for a better one. If you're in for a gamer aesthetic and a decent cooling ( with stupid ass 2 USB connectors to work this thing ) then you're in the right place. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on December 30, 2020 by Pathiwada. Krishna mohan Pathiwada. Krishna mohan

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