Comments 1 to 19 of 19

Quote The boy 4rm oz 16th June 2008, 09:14
The vendetta did quite well under load. I thought it would perform worse.
Quote wuyanxu 16th June 2008, 09:20
oh yeah! TRUE is still the top one.

i bet it can drop a lot more degree if you use one or two high CFM fan.

so what heatsink are you planning to test next? one of those newer direct contact heatpipe ones? many test sites say they are better than TRUE....... me wants a reliable source.
Quote ViPPeR_666 16th June 2008, 11:22
Nice review, as always.

Btw there's a Noctua instead of a Thermalright 120 on last page. :)
Quote Tim S 16th June 2008, 11:23
Quote:
Originally Posted by ViPPeR_666
Nice review, as always.

Btw there's a Noctua instead of a Thermalright 120 on last page. :)

it's a thermalright with the noctua fan on it :)
Quote sotu1 16th June 2008, 11:45
typo error on the noctua title :) dam i'm getting anal in my senility. surprised there's no bit-tech badges applied here to highlight the best of the punch, editors pic, recommended etc. i like those badges. makes reading a non-necessity. or was that the point?
Quote Sark.inc 16th June 2008, 11:53
wth is a delta-t stand for?!?!

i use the Coolermaster CM Sphere and, i was blown away with it's performance, 22c idle and 43 on load.

I am running the fan passively, as the fan that comes with it was to loud :P, with the fan is was 35 or so, but there are 2 fans blowing on to it :P

:edit: mind you, i am only running a E6600..
Quote kenco_uk 16th June 2008, 12:04
I should be receiving a Xigmatek HDT-S1283 from Scan in the next couple of days - from a couple of reviews, it looks to be pretty good, if not better than a TRU. See if it fits my mobo first though
Quote Tim S 16th June 2008, 12:05
Quote:
Originally Posted by cnvrt
wth is a delta-t stand for?!?!
It's the difference in temperature (a delta) between two values (in this case the CPU and ambient temps).
Quote zoot2boot 16th June 2008, 13:49
i think that's a miserable testing methodology. Ambient temps to the nearest whole number? if you're going to test coolers at differing ambient temps then you shouldn't even be displaying the temperatures. it's just misleading.

this, despite being very old, is the way to do it.

http://www.dansdata.com/coolercomp.htm
Quote cjmUK 16th June 2008, 16:12
I know we aren't trying to compete with SPCR, but some sort of metric for noise would be good; perhaps as simple as marks out of 10. Subjective is better than nothing.
Quote Shielder 16th June 2008, 16:26
Quote:
Originally Posted by zoot2boot
i think that's a miserable testing methodology. Ambient temps to the nearest whole number? if you're going to test coolers at differing ambient temps then you shouldn't even be displaying the temperatures. it's just misleading.

this, despite being very old, is the way to do it.

http://www.dansdata.com/coolercomp.htm

Good link. Very interesting. I disagree with the not displaying ambient temps though. How else are you going to prove that you didn't stick the coolers in an oven while testing?

Why do you think it's misleading anyway?

Andy
Quote Baz 16th June 2008, 17:49
Testing in the same ambient temperature is one of the very expensive options we just don't have. In an ideal world we'd test in an air conditioned, climate controlled room, where we can control the temperature to the nearest degree, but the sad fact is we can't, and so have to publish the ambient temps vs highest load temp as the key performance value.

For the same reason, we round to the nearest degree, as consistantly accurate thermometers are not cheap. While I admit it's not 100% accurate, I feel our test methodology is better than most, and gives a solid indication of real world performance, that you'd get if you fitted the heatsink in your own case, not just if you fit the heatsink on a test bench.

Although if anyone wants to donate a laboratory grade thermometer, feel free ;)
Quote liratheal 16th June 2008, 17:54
Quote:
Originally Posted by Baz
Testing in the same ambient temperature is one of the very expensive options we just don't have. In an ideal world we'd test in an air conditioned, climate controlled room, where we can control the temperature to the nearest degree, but the sad fact is we can't, and so have to publish the ambient temps vs highest load temp as the key performance value.

For the same reason, we round to the nearest degree, as consistantly accurate thermometers are not cheap. While I admit it's not 100% accurate, I feel our test methodology is better than most, and still gives a solid indication of performance.

Although if anyone wants to donate a laboratory grade thermometer, feel free ;)

I always get the feeling that I'm being lied to when things are tested in climate controled rooms. I can't speak for everyone, but I'd be quite willing to bet that the large majority of users do not have the ability to control their rooms climate either. As users we're more likely to get similar results to compare with your results, which IMO, is a more realistic view of performance.
Quote pistol_pete 16th June 2008, 19:12
Good to see my TRUE120 is still king of the coolers.

One test I'd like to see is how the cheapest and most expensive coolers (say a TRUE120 and a Freezer 7) compare for different chips. Eg, test bother with a low power dual core, and both with a heavily overclocked quad.

I'd image the TRUE120 would pull out well ahead for the quad and be much quieter, but there would be little difference between it and the Freezer 7 Pro for the low power chip.

Some actual numbers to back this up would help people in choosing a cooler suitable to their CPU.
Quote ViPPeR_666 16th June 2008, 21:23
Quote:
Originally Posted by Tim S
it's a thermalright with the noctua fan on it :)

ohhhh hahaha! my bad
Quote Sark.inc 17th June 2008, 08:10
Quote:
Originally Posted by Tim S
Quote:
Originally Posted by cnvrt
wth is a delta-t stand for?!?!
It's the difference in temperature (a delta) between two values (in this case the CPU and ambient temps).

cheers that _b
Quote MiNiMaL_FuSS 17th June 2008, 14:51
Those load temps seem a good 10c under what most other reveiws of the TRU seem to achieve?! 44C LOAD is very low!
Quote impar 17th June 2008, 18:07
Greetings!
Quote:
Originally Posted by MiNiMaL_FuSS
Those load temps seem a good 10c under what most other reveiws of the TRU seem to achieve?! 44C LOAD is very low!
They are too low because:
"All CPU temperatures are recorded from the MSI PC Alert 4 software in the operating system"

Temperatures are not from CoreTemp or RealTemp. One needs to add another 10-15ºC to compare to other reviews.
Quote ParaHelix.org 19th June 2008, 17:36
Water cooling FTW!
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