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| Chill Mat for Mac | 
enlarge | Brand: Targus Category: CE
List Price: $49.99 Buy New: $34.21 You Save: $15.78 (32%)
New (26) Used (1) from $34.21
Avg. Customer Rating: 3 reviews
Media: Electronics Autographed: No Memorabilia: No Shipping Weight (lbs): 2 Dimensions (in): 13.9 x 11.3 x 2.6 Warranty: 1 year warranty
MPN: AWE41US Model: AWE41US UPC: 092636241780 EAN: 0092636241780 ASIN: B001HQ9H2S
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Features:
| | Color - Lunar Grey | | | Exterior Dimensions - 15.15 x 11.22 x 1.45 | | | RoHS Compliant |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description The Targus Chill Mat for Mac is designed to keep your Mac notebook cool and comfy in all the right places. Two quietly powerful fans direct targeted cooling to Mac notebook hotspots revealed by detailed engineering design studies, keeping both you and your notebook cool and comfy and protecting work surfaces from heat damage. It is ergonomically angled and USB-powered for convenient, trouble-free typing. Furthermore this mat will generously accommodate all Mac notebooks up to 17". Specifications:
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| Customer Reviews:
Great Product December 28, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Works just as described with VERY little fan noise. Just the thing to keep my MacBook cool.
Good product - with drawbacks December 14, 2008 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
I've been using the Targus Chill Mat for 48 hours. Let me tell you what I think of it.
The Targus Chill Mat [...]is a laptop base for a laptop computer. It is intended to support and cool a Mac laptop computer while that computer is sitting on your lap or on a desk. It has two USB-powered cooling fans built into it. Targus boasts that it was designed for Mac laptop computers, but it also would work with lesser Windows computers.
First, I'll mention the good things. IT REALLY COOLS THE LAPTOP. I have a MacBook Pro computer with a 17" screen. Before I used the Chill Mat, the area behind the F11 key literally would burn my finger. The area was too hot for me to keep my finger there. When I was using, say, 70% of my laptop's power, that area really got hot. (I have the power usage displayed on the Menu Bar, so I can tell when the laptop really is working.) I felt that this heat was helping my furnace heat my house. It also was cooking the inside of my laptop computer - which will shorten the life of this $3,000 computer.
Now that I'm using the Chill Mat, that area literally doesn't get hot. It gets marginally hotter than the rest of the computer - but only marginally hotter. The cooling fans REALLY WORK.
The fans are so silent that at first, I didn't think that they were on. It turned out that they weren't on. There's an "on" switch on the back of the Chill Mat, and I hadn't pressed it. But even with the fans on, you really can't hear them.
The fans plug into a USB port on your laptop computer. They do use power. If you are running the computer on its internal battery, the Chill Mat will cause that battery to run down slightly more quickly. That's not a problem to me because I usually work with the laptop charger plugged in. If it's a problem for you, just disconnect the fans or turn them off when running on battery power.
The Chill Mat also looks nice. It has a gray border, and the top is a white metal mesh. While it looks nice, remember that your laptop computer will cover almost 100% of the top. When a 17" MacBook Pro computer sits on top, you aren't going to see very much of the Chill Mat.
The Chill Mat also is the only fan-cooled laptop base I've found that is big enough for a 17" laptop computer. I went over to my Micro Center today. I selected all six examples of other laptop bases that had cooling fans. I placed each one under an Apple 17" laptop computer they were selling in the store. All of them seemed to be designed for 13" or 15" laptop computers. When placed under an Apple 17" MacBook Pro laptop computer, a large amount of computer hung over both sides. They might have cooled the computer well, but they certainly weren't made for a computer that large.
In contrast, the Chill Mat is EXACTLY the size of the 17" MacBook Pro computer. (OK, I lied, it's almost two inches deeper. It sticks out a little in the back. I can live with that.)
The only problem I found with the Chill Mat is that the metal grill on the top is tilted. It tilts the base of your entire computer. In theory, this make it slightly easier for you to type. However, your computer really isn't connected to the Chill Mat. It just sits on top of this metal grill. Each time I took the Chill Mat/laptop computer off my lap, and put it on a nearby table, my computer started to slide off the tilted Chill Mat, off the table - and started to slide onto the floor.
Since this is a $3,000 computer, I really don't want it to crash onto the floor. If I took an extra few seconds each time, I could make sure the laptop computer was stable, and wasn't going to slide down. That worked for a one-time move. The problem is that I move the laptop off my lap and onto a table perhaps ten times a day - every day. If I failed to stabilize the computer once, it would crash onto the floor - and break. Sooner or later, I knew I would be in a hurry, and would forget to stabilize the computer. This was a disaster waiting to happen.
I solved this problem by using some Velcro Sticky Back fasteners. These are small squares of Velcro - and Velcro fasteners that have adhesive backs. They are the size of a postage stamp. I had purchased them some months ago from Home Depot for perhaps $3.
I peeled the backing off of four of the fasteners, and stuck them onto the front of the Chill Mat. I then peeled the backing off of four of the Velcro pieces and placed them onto the four fasteners. Very carefully, I positioned the laptop computer onto the Chill Mat. Then I pressed down. When I was done, the front of the laptop computer was fastened to Chill Mat.
With the front fastened together, I repeated what I had done at the back of the Chill Mat.
When I was done, I had eight Velcro fasteners holding the front and back of my laptop computer to the front and back of the Chill Mat. My laptop computer doesn't move - but can be separated from the Chill Mat just by pulling upwards.
I've only had the fasteners on for a few hours. They certainly seem to fasten everything together very snugly. If this level of protection isn't sufficient, I can just add more of these squares of Velcro fasteners. If eight squares of Velcro fasteners aren't sufficient, then I'll add two or four more.
Since the laptop computer is firmly fastened to the Chill Mat. I no longer have to worry about my $3,000 laptop computer sliding onto the floor.
I don't have the slightest idea why Targus didn't include some of these Velco fastener squares in the Chill Mat box. Perhaps none of their employees shop at Home Depot.
In conclusion, I would recommend the Chill Mat - as long as you install eight of these Velcro fasteners to hold the Chill Mat and the laptop computer together.
If you have a 17" MacBook Pro laptop computer, the Chill Mat certainly is better than any other fan-powered laptop base that I have seen.
Bob Leahy Moi@BobLeahy.com
What Could Have Been December 2, 2008 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
I own a 2.4ghz MacBook Pro. If anyone else owns this laptop, you know it can get very hot. It's not much of a laptop because it gets so hot you can't keep it on your lap. I read about the Chill Mat and thought it was a great idea and immediately ordered one from Amazon.
The device connects to the laptop via USB cable from the back. The bottom is a mesh-like material which covers the two fans, enclosed in a plastic casing. Where the Chill Mat fails -- and fails miserably -- is on the top. The top is a slanted, hard plastic material which immediately upon placing the laptop on top of it, causes the laptop to slide off! There are four sets of three plastic "feet" on the top, but they don't prevent the sliding.
My MBPro sits fairly stable when perched on a table, but that is hardly the point. The Chill Mat is supposed to keep the laptop cool when it sits on your lap, but there seems to be no way you can keep you computer on the Chill Mat long enough to find out if it works.
A great idea, but a poor design. If the top were made of a softer material which prevented the laptop sliding forward, it would be fantastic. As it is, I would advise you to avoid the Chill Mat.
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