Maxsun unveils a single-slot dual-GPU Intel Arc Pro B60 card

Maxsun reckons you can install 14 Intel GPUs into a single ATX workstation thanks to its slim B60 Dual design.

Maxsun has launched yet another dual-GPU Intel Battlemage card for professionals dabbling in AI. Taking cues from the previous Arc Pro B60 Dual 48G Turbo Edition, this new version swaps the original blower-style cooler for a Liquid Edition solution from Abee. The result is a compact single-slot card that allows up to seven units to be installed side by side, without wasting valuable PCIe slots.

Dual-GPU graphics cards have been abandoned by Nvidia and AMD for a long time due to their inherent complexity. However, with Intel’s entry into the discrete GPU market, Team Blue has given its partners carte blanche on how they intend to leverage its Arc chips. Among these was Maxsun, which unveiled its Intel Arc B60 Dual at Computex 2025. The idea is simple: since a workstation has a limited number of PCIe slots, why not put two GPUs into a single card, effectively doubling the potential compute power available. And since professional tasks are better at splitting the load between multiple GPUs, this solution shouldn’t require special drivers.

While the original blower-style B60 Dual offered a density improvement over the competition’s single-GPU cards, Maxsun wasn’t satisfied with its dual-slot thickness. Enter the Intel Arc Pro B60 Dual 48GB Liquid Edition, a liquid-cooled card using a water block made by Japanese hardware manufacturer Abee. Thanks to water’s higher heat-carrying capacity, Maxsun shrank the card’s size to a single slot, opening the way for even denser workstation setups.

Through this, the brand aims to offer more compute and AI inference power inside the same chassis, filling all seven PCIe slots of a W790 motherboard such as the Asus Pro WS W790E-SAGE SE. With each card packing two 24GB Arc B60 GPUs side by side, a fully populated system would offer a whopping 14 GPUs plus a total of 336GB of VRAM. This is especially handy for AI training and inference, allowing the use of larger models that wouldn’t fit otherwise.

That said, as far as the host machine is concerned, these will be detected as separate GPUs, each with its own dedicated memory and x8 PCIe interface. While two GPUs share the same PCB, they are connected to the motherboard via their dedicated half of the PCIe slot. In other words, there is no PLX chip to manage communication. The same goes for their I/O, where each GPU gets its own DisplayPort plus HDMI video outputs. Regarding power, this liquid edition should consume the same as the regular blower model, i.e. about 400W, fed via a single 12V-2×6 cable.

Maxsun intends to offer these as part of pre-built systems made in collaboration with its partners, targeting AI startups and research labs. However, it didn’t share any pricing or release dates. Considering the Arc Pro B60 Dual 48G Turbo Edition’s $1,200, we expect these to demand $1,500 a pop, or higher.

Fahd Temsamani
Fahd Temsamani
Senior Writer at Club386, his love for computers began with an IBM running MS-DOS, and he’s been pushing the limits of technology ever since. Known for his overclocking prowess, Fahd once unlocked an extra 1.1GHz from a humble Pentium E5300 - a feat that cemented his reputation as a master tinkerer. Fluent in English, Arabic, and French, his motto when building a new rig is ‘il ne faut rien laisser au hasard.’

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