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AMD Aircooling Round-Up of 2003

JMke writes: "If you want a silent AMD system you almost always have to get yourself a higher-class heatsink. Thermalright and other manufactures have brought out updated products that can keep your CPU cool while keeping the noise down, hardware geek site Madshrimps has published a roundup of the best heatsinks from 2003 that money can buy in 2004, read it here."

7 of 217 comments (clear)

  1. Re:The CPU fan is almost always quieter than the P by GuyinVA · · Score: 5, Informative

    One thing I found to help keep it quite is to actually clean the dust off the fan blades.

  2. Zalman CNPS7000A-Cu by Captain+Beefheart · · Score: 4, Informative

    It runs almost completely silent and keeps things impressively cool. Didn't have to buy special thermal grease, either. It's also compatible with Pentium 4's and the Athlon 64. It really is teh uber, and comes with a free fanmate to manually adjust fan speed. However, it is huge and doesn't fit on all motherboards, so buyer beware.

  3. Conclusion Page - in case of /.'ing by chadw17 · · Score: 5, Informative

    :edit: Site appears to be slowing/not responding :/edit:

    Conclusion :
    Let's look at the advantages and disadvantages of the reviewed products

    Swiftech MCX462-V
    (Provided by: Bacata)
    PRO
    Plug&Play installation
    Easy attachment of both 80&90mm fans
    Top end performance in both silent as loud categories

    CON
    Higher price

    The MCX462-V is a true engineering beauty, combining functionality with top performance, the helicoid pin layout allows for very low noise production when using different types of fans. The full copper block provides excellent thermal conduction making overclocking possible even with very silent fans!

    Thermalright SP-97
    (Provided by: Thermalright)
    PRO
    1st class performance in all categories
    Secure installation
    Efficiency increases with the CPU overclock thanks to the heat pipes

    CON
    Installation requires motherboard removal

    The successful formula from the SP-94 Intel heatsink has been brought over to the AMD side of town, and the performance is stunting, providing excellent results no matter what fan is used, it edges out the competition by a comfortable margin!

    Thermalright SLK947-U
    (Provided by: Bacata)
    PRO
    Good overall performance
    Secure installation
    Competitively priced

    CON
    Installation requires motherboard removal

    The "older" SLK947-U still delivers very respectable results, although its performance has been surpassed by the SP-97, it manages to provide the best performance/price ratio in this roundup. If you are on a budget but still want top end air-cooling for your AMD setup then look no further then the latest SLK from Thermalright!

    Scythe Kamakaze
    (Provided by: Bacata)
    PRO
    Includes a Fan + Rheobus
    Decent performance

    CON
    Installation method far from perfect on all motherboards

    I had a lot of installation issues with this heatsink but that was due to the socket/capacitor layout used by the board on which we did the test. The performance is average, edging out the old PAL8045 by a very small margin.

    Evercool MAG-01 & CUF-715CA
    (Provided by: Evercool)
    PRO
    Very easy installation
    Decent performance
    Silent 70mm fan included
    Very competitively priced

    CON
    Not "strong" enough for overclocking your AMD

    Both Evercool heatsink proved to be worthy replacements for the Stock AMD cooler, providing better cooling at lower noise levels while being priced at only ~20! My preference goes out to the MAG-01 as it can be installed on almost all popular Sockets out there from Intel & AMD. The copper/alu mix does have an impact on the performance when compared to the full copper CUF-715CA, but the difference is minimal.

  4. Great Heat Sink Reviews by Jeffrey+Baker · · Score: 4, Informative

    Dan's Data has amazing heat sink reviews. Dan tests each heat sink with a heater simulating the Pentium or Athlon CPU. He publishes the R-theta values for each sink tested and has a very straightforward scientific view of the whole process.

  5. Re:The CPU fan is almost always quieter than the P by dslbrian · · Score: 4, Informative

    The CPU fan is both more important and, generally, quieter than the power supply.

    Not in my experience, usually the CPU fans are 60mm and higher RPM, whereas the power supply is generally larger with a slower RPM. To the first order RPM == noise...

    These days there isn't much jeopardy to run a couple degrees hotter for several dB quieter operation. I know that Intel CPUs will throttle down if they get dangerously hot. Frankly I'd rather save my hearing and sanity than the CPU anyway.

    One additional annoyance is that most motherboard manufacturers go to the added length of putting unnecessary fans on the board chipset as well. These tend to be small (40mm) and run at stupidly high speeds (6000+ RPM) given the amount of power dissipation they need to counter.

    One system I have, a shuttle XPC, doubles up the task of case fan and CPU cooler. I pulled the fan off the board chipset, and also the graphics card (replaced the graphics one with a Zalman passive), pulled the 80mm 5000 RPM Sunon dustbuster fan off the CPU heatsink and replaced it with a 2500 RPM much quieter fan. Now it runs with a total of two fans, CPU and PS, much quieter even at full load. How is this possible without having the thing cook itself ?? simple by underclocking - running the FSB at 190MHz instead of 200MHz. Performance difference is incremental and it runs stable at full load (and its much much quieter).

  6. Intel noise hell by Zathrus · · Score: 4, Informative

    Well my work desktop runs at around 60 decibels from ~2 feet away. Yes, that's loud. And it's an Intel P3 system from IBM. I want a new desktop PC purely because it's so damn loud... I don't actually need more CPU, memory, or disk.

    My home PCs are all AMD, all with the stock fan/hs. The stock AMD fan/hs isn't incredibly noisy, but it certainly isn't the quietest thing out there. The loudest system is really quite bad -- but it's because of a very loud PS fan and several case fans. I'll eventually take some steps to quiet it down, because it is ungodly loud (at least to me).

    If you really want to reduce system noise, then check out Silent PC Review. They do some real testing of sound levels and give some pretty solid advice on how to quiet PCs.

  7. http://www.silentpcreview.com/ by Mipmap · · Score: 4, Informative

    I like this site because it reviews all kinds of PC silencing stuff, not just heatsinks/fans. Seems to be modeled on the popular www.storagereview.com site.

    Has reviews of...

    DIY Systems
    Prebuilt Systems
    Cases & Damping
    Power Supplies
    Cooling
    Fans & Controls
    Storage