MAXSUN Officially Lists Liquid Cooled Arc PRO B60 Dual 48G With Single Slot Design and 12V 2×6 Power

MAXSUN has now officially listed its liquid cooled Intel Arc PRO B60 Dual 48G, giving the workstation focused dual GPU card a formal product page after earlier previews and channel appearances. The new MAXSUN Arc PRO B60 Dual 48G Liquid joins the company’s growing Arc Pro lineup and stands out for combining a single slot form factor with liquid cooling and a 16 pin 12V 2×6 power connector, a layout clearly aimed at dense professional multi GPU deployments rather than conventional desktop gaming builds.

One of the most notable parts of this launch is the board’s positioning against MAXSUN’s earlier Turbo version. MAXSUN’s current Arc catalog shows both the liquid edition and the previously listed Turbo model, confirming that the company is actively building out multiple thermal designs around the same dual B60 concept. That gives system builders a clearer segmentation path, with the Turbo model targeting more traditional air cooled workstation use while the liquid version pushes toward higher density and potentially quieter rack or tower configurations.

The broader appeal here is capacity and deployment efficiency. The Arc PRO B60 Dual 48G design is built around a 48GB memory configuration and a dual GPU concept, making it far more relevant to AI inference, visualization, and workstation tasks than to mainstream gaming. In practical terms, a single slot liquid cooled approach matters because it opens the door to significantly denser builds than a dual slot card would allow. That is the kind of design choice that can materially improve workstation scalability for users chasing maximum local VRAM and GPU count in one chassis.

The power connector choice is also worth watching. MAXSUN’s liquid edition uses the same 16 pin connector approach associated with 12V 2×6 implementation on the board, showing that the company is comfortable carrying modern high power delivery standards into this professional dual GPU category as well. That alone does not tell us final total board power, but it does reinforce that this is not a low power novelty card. It is being framed as serious compute hardware.

There is still an important distinction between official listing and full retail rollout. MAXSUN has clearly published the liquid model, but public availability details remain more limited than the product page itself. Community posts such as this Reddit user report on the Turbo model suggest that at least some Arc PRO B60 Dual cards are already reaching end users, though that post specifically concerns the Turbo variant rather than the liquid card. So for now, it is safest to say the liquid model is officially presented and quote ready, while broader retail timing still looks like something to watch.

From an industry perspective, this is one of the more interesting workstation GPU moves around Intel Arc hardware right now. Most vendors are still playing it relatively safe with conventional cooler layouts, but MAXSUN is testing how far it can stretch the Arc Pro formula with aggressive form factor and deployment ideas. If the company can bring the liquid edition to market in meaningful volume, it could carve out a niche among workstation buyers who want compact multi GPU compute density without immediately jumping to far more expensive alternatives.


Would you rather see Intel Arc Pro cards pushed into dense AI workstations like this, or do you think Intel’s bigger opportunity is still in mainstream creator and gaming GPUs?

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Angel Morales

Founder and lead writer at Duck-IT Tech News, and dedicated to delivering the latest news, reviews, and insights in the world of technology, gaming, and AI. With experience in the tech and business sectors, combining a deep passion for technology with a talent for clear and engaging writing

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