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Intel Hardware

Twenty Five Intel CPU Coolers Tested 123

Kez writes "Over recent years coolers have grown increasingly exotic in design, striving for good cooling performance and low noise even with the most power hungry of CPUs. But sometimes that comes at a price, be it straining the motherboard's socket to its limit, or the wallets of PC enthusiasts. Investigating which coolers do their job well without snapping your motherboard in two, HEXUS.net reviews 25 LGA775 coolers."
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Twenty Five Intel CPU Coolers Tested

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  • by mulvane ( 692631 ) on Saturday June 02, 2007 @12:57PM (#19363955)
    That the most effective (and costly), is sticking my wife on my processor. Her icy cold personality towards my computers has allowed me to reach near 0 Kelvin on many over clocked processor lines.
    • That the most effective (and costly), is sticking my wife on my processor. Her icy cold personality towards my computers has allowed me to reach near 0 Kelvin on many over clocked processor lines.

      And thanks to that dual core Prescott processor, she sure has a hot ass!
  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday June 02, 2007 @01:01PM (#19363997)

    i have seen less adverts on a domain squatters site, running a website must be really expensive if you have to be that desperate to plaster the page with 20+ adverts per page (from multiple advert servers) and as a result create a page that is over 400kb of tracking/advert scripts and images when the actual content you read is about 1kb

    i guess dignity has no place on that site, or this one for that matter for linking to such a pathetic excuse for a website
    • Really? I suppose my ad blocker must be doing its job. Thanks for the heads up.
    • 119 pages... when it could be done in two or three...!

      Not even the geekiest uber-geek in the universe would wade through all that.
    • Absolutely. I was about to post the same message about avoiding the site for all those Google Adwords boxes, etc. I'm not great at cynicism, but it almost appears like a cunning ploy to deliver 1000's of Slashdot eyeballs at geeky Google Adwords ads and make a tidy sum on a Sunday morning? Hmmm...
  • Wow, one graph per page. Why do PC reviews think spreading out the entire review on 20+ pages is such a good idea?
    • Re: (Score:1, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward
      Sadly, you are off by an order of magnitude. This article is spread over 120 pages, with no print version available. I'd almost say that this is a record, but I fear someone will prove me wrong.
  • by Spazntwich ( 208070 ) on Saturday June 02, 2007 @01:03PM (#19364019)
    When was the last time a CPU failed at stock speed with the stock cooler?

    The obsession with aftermarket cooling solutions for all but the harder core overclockers strikes me as about as ridiculous as engine oil companies' claims of their oil increasing engine life over other oils. When was the last time you heard about an engine seizing that didn't straight-up run out of oil or suffer from a factory error?
    • by mulvane ( 692631 )
      Reduced power usage caused by cooler chips, not to mention thermal degradation over time (some people keep computers for a long time withtout upgrade) could be a factor..
      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by 427_ci_505 ( 1009677 )
        I'm pretty sure they're using the same amount of power, but just getting rid of wasted heat better. I might be wrong. Does a cooler chip need less power to do a certain action than the same chip running warm?
        • Even if it does, the swing can't be more than a few watts in either direction.

          Otherwise, Intel and AMD would release power usage under load numbers for various temperatures, and people constructing server centers would take that into account with their air conditioning decisions.
        • No, the cooler is dissipating previously evolved heat generated by the amount of electricity moving through the processor. It's just wasted E left over from processing. To reduce the amount of power consumed by the processor, one must manually (or automatically in some cases) reduce the voltages associated with the operation of the CPU (Vcore) or throttle the clocks on the CPU. You can do some low V overclocking with very good cooling. You should also be able to run your voltages at lower temps even at sto
        • by mulvane ( 692631 )
          Line resistance increases as heat rises. Its common electrical theory. That's one reason its good to use a large gauge wire and fuse it properly at the panel to decrease line loss over long runs with high power demands.
      • by Molochi ( 555357 )
        no
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by Netsplitter ( 983360 )
      A lot more people are aiming to have silent computers nowadays. While the cooling capabilities may suffice, they are very loud. Personally, I can't understand how anyone can be in the same room with the sound of a stock cooler, let alone try to sleep in the same room with one.
      • Do you have any numbers for decibel ratings on more recent stock coolers and some aftermarket ones? I haven't been in the overclocking scene for a few years, but back then stock coolers were among the quietest available, short of going with the huge Zalman's.
        • Actually I'll take back what I said. I just fetched my Code 2 Duo's stock cooler and plugged it in. It's actually fairly quite, although still somewhat audible since it's using an 80mm fan (or around that). Now, about those "back then" stock coolers. They were NOT quite. That's where my prejudice against them came from. I'm talking as late back as the Northwood Pentium 4's, since I never bothered with another one since.
      • by suv4x4 ( 956391 )
        Personally, I can't understand how anyone can be in the same room with the sound of a stock cooler, let alone try to sleep in the same room with one.

        Speak for yourself. I actually can't sleep with my PC turned off. I'm so used to the noise of the fans, that if exposed to complete silence I immediately get paranoias that someone's coming to get me and someone's watching me.

        But that nothing compared to the noise in my ears I hear without fan noise, from all the long ears of exposure to loud music.

        If anything,
      • Depends which CPU the cooler is cooling.
        I have a E6600 and it's barely audible with stock cooler.
    • I agree that some people make an obsession out of squeezing the most OCing or cooling out of their computers. Normal people like me, however, like to have a silent computer and you just can't compare something like a Zalman to a stock cooler, noisewise. Besides, it looks good in my windowed case at LAN parties :)
    • Maybe I just had a slightly defective unit or something, but the stock cooler on my Intel CPU (Celeron D 351 3.20GHz) would routinely idle around 50 C or so, and hit 70 degrees C or higher under load, even running an ancient game like Starcraft - my fans would rev up high enough to sound like jet engines.

      In contrast, I swapped it out with one of the reviewed coolers (the Arctic 7 Freezer Pro), and I see at least a 10 degree difference (or more) in pretty much everything i've run since then.
    • by ben there... ( 946946 ) on Saturday June 02, 2007 @01:29PM (#19364231) Journal
      If you look at the prices for Core 2 Duos [newegg.com], the difference between something like the E6600 and the X6800 is $750. Slap a $50 cooler on the E6600, clock it up to 3.2 GHz easily (~3.6 GHz max on air) and you have a CPU that performs better than one that would have cost you $700 more. You'd have to be kinda crazy not to overclock the Core 2 Duos.

      You're right that most users don't, but they should. It's a worthy investment.
      • Overclocking isn't exactly easy. When I try to overclock my core 2 duo it just doesn't start up. It's not something anyone can do.
        • Anyone CAN do it, provided they attain a certain level of knowledge about A. How the hardware functions to do it's job, and B. How to INCRIMENTALLY increase the performance of the system (by tweaking of individual component parameters to affect the whole). Most of the secrets can be found in wonderfully written how-to's on enthusiast websites.

          It's not easy, but it's not very hard either. Rather it's time consuming, but as a previous poster mentioned it also delivers very tangible rewards much like a "70%

          • by snuf23 ( 182335 )
            It was extremely easy on my Core 2 Duo 6600. Of course I have an Asus board that has proper settings for easy overclocking. All I needed to do was boost the FSB to get to 3.0GHz, 100% stable on stock air cooling. But then maybe I got lucky with my chip.
        • Some boards, such as my Asus P5W DH Deluxe have different ways to overclock, some of which are absurdly simple, such as "overclock 30%". By looking at the values it used, and a quick google search, it didn't take me long to figure out how to overclock to much faster speeds with the manual settings. (The problem I had at first was setting my memory far too fast and making the system crash. By setting it to ~800 mhz, I got my processor stable at 3.5GHz easily.)
        • There's this application that comes with gigabyte motherboards specially for newbies (like me), it's called Easytune5. When you open it, it has two big buttons, up and down. Clicking up increases clockspeed in 1% increments. I upped the clock speed on my E6600 by 15% using this method and everything works fine. I could hear no fan noise increase and I am using stock cooler.
          Of coarse, you could tweak a lot more performance out of it, if you want to go mucking around with bios settings, but I just don't have
      • by ghyd ( 981064 )
        A better cooler can also be set at a lower speed, for people aiming to a near silent PC.
    • In the last three years, the machine under my desk at work has had its CPU replaced once, and motherboard replaced four times due to fan failures. It's a machine built with salvaged parts, but the CPU is a 1.3GHz Athlon, so they're not exactly ancient. All of these were stock fans, supplied by the lowest bidder.
    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Kamokazi ( 1080091 )
      You're somewhat right.

      But that article is not targeted at most users. It's targeted at geeks like us, who want either:

      a) A quiter PC
      b) A PC that will last longer because their components ran cooler
      c) People who stress their CPUs a lot and want to ensure they are not going to die prematurely (gamers and powerusers).
      d) Overclockers

      Also, why are datacenters and server rooms often air conditioned to well below room temperature? Longer life, true, but also better stability. See how long you can run Prime95 on
      • by IMightB ( 533307 )
        I don't know about most geeks, bu I for one do not want a quiter PC....

        A quieter one yes but quiter no.
    • by akita ( 16773 )
      The Intel stock coolers have a rather crappy way to attach to the motherboard.
      They are designed to be assembled without removing the board, but inexperienced technicians will often assemble it in a way is not really doing the desired pressure against the the cpu, resulting in over 50C temperatures in iddle mode.
      Due to this retarded clipping desgin, repeated removing of the cooler will break the clips.
      Give me something with screws big enough to be screwed with my not so delicate hands like those on the Tuni
    • Its a real thing.

      Under certain conditions, the motor oil in your car can literally cook itself into a solid, and stop lubricating an engine.

      If you are lucky, your radiator overheats before you blow a gasket separating oil from water. Get water into a place where oil goes and all kinds of things can go wrong.

      The answer? Synthetic oil only. It does prolong engine life, especially in older cars with lots of miles on them. No matter how hot they get, they dont cook off and stop lubricating an engine. Also

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by raw-sewage ( 679226 )

      When was the last time a CPU failed at stock speed with the stock cooler? The obsession with aftermarket cooling solutions for all but the harder core overclockers strikes me as about as ridiculous as engine oil companies' claims of their oil increasing engine life over other oils. When was the last time you heard about an engine seizing that didn't straight-up run out of oil or suffer from a factory error?

      True, but some people (such as myself) have a different/additional obsession: silent computing [silentpcreview.com]. St

    • I've had my stock cooler die 3 times. And the one right now heats up and my computer shuts down.

      And yeah silence is a big factor as well.
    • by cbraga ( 55789 )
      You're wrong.

      Intel's stock cooler makes more noise than a 747 on take-off.

      I tossed mine on the trash and put a QUIET cooler. I can even work now.
    • by Nimey ( 114278 )
      My old box: Athlon 2600+, Palomino core. Running Folding@home for a few days (in Linux) and it rebooted. This was a repeatable behavior and stopped when I quit folding.

      It was Debian, so not likely that an OS fault would crash the system.
    • That's true, but please don't forget about the rest of us who like getting free speed increases ;)
      - Running a Core 2 E6420 @ 3.5GHz on an Arctic Freezer 7 Pro. Besides, you can sell the stock cooler (it's worth ~$5 - $10).
    • by balthan ( 130165 )
      Aftermarket coolers are useless for most users.

      And how many those "most users" read Slashdot or Hexus?
    • I agree, and even as for noise levels, my stock cooler this time (with the Core 2 Duo E6600 package) was surprisingly quiet, especially with the noise padding I had installed into the case since earlier for an overall reduction.
    • by wpegden ( 931091 )

      The obsession with aftermarket cooling solutions for all but the harder core overclockers strikes me as about as ridiculous as engine oil companies' claims of their oil increasing engine life over other oils. When was the last time you heard about an engine seizing that didn't straight-up run out of oil or suffer from a factory error?

      Just to set the record straight here, preventing the engine from seizing isn't the only reason you have oil in your engine. Among other things, the oil plays an essential ro

  • by RpiMatty ( 834853 ) on Saturday June 02, 2007 @01:07PM (#19364053)
    Exec 1: So how do we fit 1 million ads into a review?
    Exec 2: 25 products with 4 pages each?
    Exec 1: BRILLIANT!

    • I wasn't aware of any advertising on the page.

      Have you considred using a HOSTS file? [mvps.org]
    • by iBooks ( 1037482 )
      The problem with this is that they assumed that ./ readers would actually read the article :)
    • Exec 1: But what if people try to steal our valuable pictures of processor cooling equipment?
      Exec 2: Think of the revenue we'll lose!
      Exec 1: We'd better paste our logo full size into the middle of the images, over their content.
      Exec 2: FANTASTIC! This internet stuff is easy.
  • by bcmm ( 768152 ) on Saturday June 02, 2007 @01:10PM (#19364069)
    I have a CNPS7700-AlCu. It's a cheaper one than the one they review - and also smaller. The piece of metal with the vanes sits straight on the CPU with no heat pipes or anything. What they don't mention is that even my smaller cooler is technically out-of-spec - they're heavier than a LGA775 cooler should be, but motherboards don't actually snap that easily.

    Anyway, the cooler comes with a device for adjusting it's speed, and it is practically silent on the lowest setting while still providing pretty good cooling. It helps that my processor isn't a very hot one (Intel Core 2 Duo 6300), but even on the silent setting I cannot make it go over 49 C. In fact, the vanes have enough surface area that if it's a cold day, the cooler works fine disconnected, i.e. without the fan turning.

    As they say, fitting it can be a pain, but that is presumably the price you pay for fitting some 700g of copper on the motherboard.

    By the way, it's worth taking measurements or checking their list of supported motherboards - it's physical dimensions are beyond the LGA775 spec as well. It extends out over the components immediately surrounding the CPU, and on my motherboard it neatly blows air through the northbridge and GPU heatsinks.
    • Link to the 7700-AlCu [newegg.com] you mentioned.

      I have the 9700 NT [newegg.com]. Like you, I was concerned with the huge size and weight of some of the towers. The Zalmans provide most of the benefit of the towers (performance, "silent"), while weighing in much closer to spec. They also include the fan, rather than some of the towers where you attach a 120 mm. That can be good or bad depending on whether you wanted to install your own quiet fan.

      The difference between the 9700 LED that they reviewed and the 9700 NT that I own is pri
      • by bcmm ( 768152 )
        The 7700 has a somewhat strange way of controlling fan speed. Irritatingly, it cannot be controlled through software like some fans, but instead has a little box with a variable resistor adjustable by a little knob, with an adhesive patch to mount it outside the case. Maybe it's because it's harder to silence a pulse width modulated fan than one which is regulated by a constant voltage.
  • by A Friendly Troll ( 1017492 ) on Saturday June 02, 2007 @01:10PM (#19364071)
    Some really, really great coolers, like the Noctua U12 or the Ultra 120 Extreme, don't fare very well on their test.

    Also, if you haven't noticed, there's no word about fan noise... Which is extremely important to a lot of people. What good is a couple of degrees difference between cooler A and cooler B, if the latter includes a 4000 fan that sounds like a jet engine while the former is inaudible in a closed case?

    Look [silentpcreview.com] elsewhere [madshrimps.be] if you want to read proper articles about the subject.
    • by nbowman ( 799612 )
      They tested the regular Thermalright Ultra-120, not the eXtreme (the extreme is actually a bit better, and so far as I have seen elsewhere is generally considered the best air cooler around)
      the review sucks for a variety of reasons, they used different fans for every cooler (and no mention of how many CFM they push) which makes their cooling results useless, they did no noise testing, and there were errors in several places I looked (for one: the thermalright is listed as being AM2 incompatible, but there i
      • They tested the regular Thermalright Ultra-120, not the eXtreme
        I apologize. As you said, there are 12836521 pages in the review, and it's very confusing... My bad.

        Still, there's not much of a difference between the Extreme and the regular version. A couple of degrees at most.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      Also, if you haven't noticed, there's no word about fan noise... Which is extremely important to a lot of people. What good is a couple of degrees difference between cooler A and cooler B, if the latter includes a 4000 fan that sounds like a jet engine while the former is inaudible in a closed case?

      I posted a comment to that effect on their forum. A staff member replied [hexus.net]:

      Had the guys done noise, something else would have had to drop.

      Luckily they found the time to rate the packaging [hexus.net] the coolers came in.

    • I have a Scythe Ninja B because of reviews I read on silent pc sites. I have to say its very quiet indeed, and I have to put my ear close to the case hear anything going on. My temps for cpu are also much lower than with noisey stock cooler. I overclocked an E6600 to 3.0 and considered it a waste of time for my uses and went back to specs (it takes less than 5 minutes to get it to 3.0 again if I was going to be encoding or something for awhile). Having abandoned overclocking, I would still get one of these
  • 3rd place

    Tuniq Tower 120

    It may not be an easy cooler to install but that's made up for by its performance. Enthusiasts rave about the Tower 120 and their praise is not misplaced, judging by the figures we saw. Third position overall and deserving that high placing along with an eXtreme Recommended award.

    2nd place

    Scythe Miné

    While Scythe might not class the Miné as a high-performance cooler, we most certainly do. It delivers exceptional performance and at a price well under £30 that eve
    • I was going to moderate this thread, but I just had to chime in with my experiences with Tt's Big Typhoon once I found that it was rated so highly - I recently bought one at a local shop and used the included thermal paste, put it on my Core 2 Duo E6600, and did a modest (25%) overclock, bringing it up to 3GHz. The Asus P5N32-E SLI Plus board I bought was probably the most important component in the overclock, though. I'm a big fan of symmetry so I'm using 2x2GB of lower-latency memory at only 667MHz to mat
  • by LibertineR ( 591918 ) on Saturday June 02, 2007 @01:17PM (#19364127)
    1. You use water cooling on your computer, and have friends with whom you regularly compare operating temps.

    2. You rearrainge your workspace to see the built-in temperature guage no matter where you are.

    3. You have a variable speed control for the fan on your power supply, and adjust it based on weather conditions.

    4. You believe that the fan on top of your workstation blowing out actually does anything worthy of the added cost.

    5. Your workspace sounds like a 747 on approach because of all the fans in your workstation.

    Nobody ever got laid over their ability to keep their computer cool. Cool is out, QUIET is in, bitches.

    • by z0M6 ( 1103593 )
      Well guess what. I use water cooling because of noise issues. now if only I could get my psu water cooled as well (I know about the more expensive models. yet those are outside my price range.)
    • I think you're a little angry because you could never overclock your processor an extra megahertz past stock. Maybe it was noisy in the past, what with those 9 fans and all, but now there's some very good technology to cool all the hot components well enough that it works passively. Of course, you'd add on a fan if you want to overclock it, and even then they run at inaudible speeds. There are heatsinks for your RAM now! See, 3000RPM fans. They do pick up a bit if you do something intensive, like play one o
      • I am overclocked with passive gear, but I used to be one of those 9-fan fools. Silent fans, psu, etc. No problems except maybe after an hour in Call of Duty with all the settings maxed out. And yeah, my psu has a variable speed control, but I just dont talk about it.

        I just dont want to reach a point where I know more about cooling down a computer, than about warming up a vagina. Ya dig?

        • Actually I think it's a little sad that you're embarrassed of your own hobby. What's so shameful about it, exactly? Cooling computers and warming vaginas don't have to be mutually exclusive.
          • First, computers are NOT my hobby.

            I USE computers to make money helping Corporations USE computers to do business.

            We could just as easily be discussing which oil to use to keep a pipe wrench from squeaking. Would that make using pipe wrenches a hobby?

            Look, I just think we take these things a bit too seriously. Whether playing a game, or writing a proposal, a computer is just a means to an end, and something we should not become so enamored with that we blow good money after bad ideas, like nuts who pu

          • Yes, actually they do. Have to be mutually exclusive, that is.
    • by apharov ( 598871 )
      The thing is that these so-called comparisons are totally useless from a silencing point of view unless the heatsinks are tested with the same airflow. They are even useless for maximum cooling crowd because it is quite common among the enthusiasts to swap the stock fan for something more suitable.

      Check www.silentpcreview.com if you want decent heatsink reviews with comparable results. Their advertising is annoying but the content is good.
  • by syylk ( 538519 ) on Saturday June 02, 2007 @01:17PM (#19364131) Homepage
    Ok, all nice and cute... ...But ONE HUNDRED AND NINETEEN pages to describe CPU coolers?

    I mean, WTF? Next time, just put one word per page, alongside 29763410974 banners/links/ads and be done with it. This kind of... err... "journalism" is spiraling down. Quickly.

    I know I will miss some incredibly useful piece of vital information by avoiding to read all 119 pages. But I also know there are more creative ways to offend my own intelligence.
    • Ok, all nice and cute... ...But ONE HUNDRED AND NINETEEN pages to describe CPU coolers?

      Two sentences per page with the rest being ads... Any decent story would be that long at least...

    • This is partly why I don't visit "hardware enthusiast" sites. If you visit one, you'll probably find about five menubars, maybe two to the top, one to each side, one on the bottom, as well as ads. I much prefer the format of a paper magazine - there is one index per issue, paper magazines didn't try to put an index on every page, and every ten words is double underlined and bolded so you can click to get an ad that's out of context with the word in question! It's impossible to overstate that the vision o
  • 1) Make review span 120 pages (literally) 2) Put 5 flash adds on each page 3) Profit!!!
  • A ten page article spread out onto 120 pages. Wow. Anyone have a one to ten page link for us dial-up/cell phone uses?
  • Does anyone really care about 2*C lower if the thing sounds like a jet taking off? I would imagine that someone who cares about such a tiny margin will use water cooling anyways.

    Instead of sound levels they test installation time? Unless you are changing the thing daily or installing thousands on an assembly line I fail to see the importance of this metric.

  • 25 CPU coolers on your machine - that's got to be a chilly box... Add a beer compartment?
  • Page 115 (Score:3, Insightful)

    by $RANDOMLUSER ( 804576 ) on Saturday June 02, 2007 @01:56PM (#19364429)
    The graph for CPU temp under load - my question is, if you're an aftermarket cooler maker, and you can't even beat the Intel stock cooler, why exactly did you go to market?
    • Most poeple don't even get to the first page of the article, and you got to page 115? Well done Sir!
    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Mr EdgEy ( 983285 )
      Some people buy OEM to save cash, and a cheap cooler helps them with that
    • Noise (Score:3, Informative)

      by joeflies ( 529536 )
      One is a passively cooled sink, so if you're not concerned about the few degrees centigrade difference, but are majorly concerned about noise, you can get a passively cooled one that doesn't cool as well as stock sink, but it also has no fan.
    • The graph for CPU temp under load - my question is, if you're an aftermarket cooler maker, and you can't even beat the Intel stock cooler, why exactly did you go to market?

      Perhaps to provide a quieter cooler than the stock one, which isn't exactly quiet? I don't overclock, and I really don't care what temperature the CPU is at so long as it's still within specs and stable. I do care about noise though.
  • by btempleton ( 149110 ) on Saturday June 02, 2007 @02:52PM (#19364849) Homepage
    I mean it just seems to me to be ridiculous to have detailed review of the packaging of all these coolers, and to pick a winner on something we'll throw out, but not to measure one of the most important factors in choosing a cooler -- noise levels.

    I just can't fathom why the packaging review, it makes me suspect the motives of the whole thing.
  • What about dust? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by justthinkit ( 954982 ) <floyd@just-think-it.com> on Saturday June 02, 2007 @03:27PM (#19365079) Homepage Journal
    I've have a (sucky) Dell desktop and when it is clean inside it runs quietly, even at 100% CPU load. Then as the days go by and the dog scratches his derriere repeatedly the fan noise rises. After about 10 days to two weeks I have to shut it down, vacuum it thoroughly inside and it is quiet once again.

    So, how do these coolers perform with some dust in them? That is the cooler I want for the increased uptime.
  • by Gordo_1 ( 256312 ) on Saturday June 02, 2007 @03:32PM (#19365113)
    Ok, why would anyone spend $50+ to buy one of these monstrosities? Two reasons:

    1. You want safe overclocked performance from the latest Core2Duo processors
    2. You want a 'quiet' CPU cooling solution

    This review utterly failed to achieve either end-user goal because they failed to even attempt to control variables, among other problems. Instead they:

    1. Completely ignored noise as an issue. Sure the winning heatsink has huge heat pipes and all, but does its built-in fan sound like a jet engine to achieve its mark?
    2. Did not standardize on a single 3rd-party fan to control for the huge variance in quality from one manufacturer to another.
    3. Did not standardize on a single high performance thermal compound, but rather used whatever cheap goo each manufacturer stuck in the box.
    4. No indication whether any of the extra cooling performance achieved by the top sinks actually has any positive effect on overclockability (aside from noise, the only other reason why you might reasonably consider one of these heatsinks). Many overclockers fail to achieve >50% overclocks of Core2Duo due to voltage regulation, memory or chipset cooling issues, independent of CPU cooling. For example, if your motherboard can't maintain a consistent voltage for the CPU under load, it doesn't matter that your heatsink achieves -270 degrees Kelvin.

    So, in summary, all I've found out is which retail combination keeps my CPU coolest, irregardless of noise and whether the extra cooling performance actually matters. Hmmmm...great. IMHO, if you need to buy one of these things (like I did a while back) do yourself a favor and go read http://www.silentpcreview.com/ [silentpcreview.com] . They're a lot more scientific about their methodology.

    Disclaimer: I do not and have not ever worked for, nor do I know anyone who works for SilentPCReview, I just happen to think their testing methods suck a lot less.
  • Im all for site trying to make money from ad's, really I am. But 120 pages? LOADED with ads. Thats just insane.
  • Most people use whatever stock cooler they get when they buy the CPU, which in this day and age is both reasonably quiet and keeps your CPU reasonably cool, without either the need to actively monitor or actively tweak it.

    People who want a faster gaming rig buy faster graphics cards and more graphics cards.
    People who want more CPU power buy faster CPUs and more cores.

    Ignoring for the moment the bare few whose environmental conditions /really/ warrant custom cooling, most people I've met who buy this shit ar
    • by Ant P. ( 974313 )
      That last one looks interesting. My wifi/dsl boxes are using 30W and probably cost just as much. Can't do anything with them either since I don't want to brick them trying to install custom firmware or anything.
  • You greatly reduce the noise production by, twice every year, wiping all dust off the cooler-fans and fan-blades (especially onderneath where it's hard to reach) with a toothbrush (not your own).

    You 'll be surprised.
  • 1st place - Thermaltake Big Typ VX

    2nd place - Scythe Miné
    3rd place - Tuniq Tower 120
    4th place - Titan Amanda
    5th place - Zalman 9700
  • i feel sorry for the reviewer, what a moron, comparing coolers using different fans is pretty much useless. you can make almost any of the heatsinks listed either a super quite poor performer, or a jet engine sounding super cooling machine, all by changing the fan. whats more, not including dB measurements in a review of HSFs today is laughable, whats the point.

    the real measurement of a heatsink by most enthusiasts standards today lies in a perfect balance of cooling+silence, do yourself a favor and read
  • Rather than suffer through more than 100 pages (WTF?) of advertisements and bad testing, I'd like to refer all of you to this simple page:

    The Dan's Data CPU Cooler Snap Judgement Guide [dansdata.com]

    It's about five years old, but the thermodynamic problem of removing waste heat from an object is about the same as it has ever been.

  • High end users will find this interesting, I think.
  • Anybody got the pagecount on that one? 150 pages? seriously... I tested over 150 HSF so far; latest roundups are for AMD/INTEL's latest CPUs Roundup of HSF of 2006 http://www.madshrimps.be/?action=getarticle&artic I D=519 [madshrimps.be] Roundup of HSF 2007 P1 http://www.madshrimps.be/gotoartik.php?articID=556 [madshrimps.be] currently adding 8 more to the list, closing in on 200 HSF tested; and all this in less than 150+ pages per article...
  • but I really thought that the title implied that someone was trying to put 25 coolers on one chip.

    That by itself would be pretty neat, though.

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