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High-end CPU Coolers Reviewed and Compared

jjslash writes "CPU cooling units are an often-overlooked but always important side of PC building, whether you're looking to overclock or you simply want a cool-running, silent system. It's also easy to get lost if you aren't an enthusiast who keeps tabs on the best options. TechSpot has rounded up 10 high-end CPU coolers (read: huge heatsinks) including top units from Noctua, Thermalright, Xigmatek, Silverstone and Thermaltake. If you're willing to spend the cash, they rate the Noctua NH-U14S as the best overall pick. For a tighter budget, the Thermalright offerings provide the best bang for your buck."

10 of 133 comments (clear)

  1. Um, is this news? by WilliamGeorge · · Score: 4, Insightful

    These sorts of reviews are done regularly, by dozens of websites. I like computer hardware news (its the industry I work in, after all) but please don't let every review or roundup out there make it to Slashdot.

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    William George
    1. Re:Um, is this news? by Arkh89 · · Score: 4, Funny

      Don't worry, Slashdot already hit rock-bottom with this article...
      Or did they?

    2. Re:Um, is this news? by interkin3tic · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I might forgive it were it not doing that fucking "put content across 10 pages!!!" thing.

      Techspot: fuck you and fuck your attempts to make your articles worth ten times as much without actually doing ten times more work.

  2. Loudness rating? by omnichad · · Score: 3, Insightful

    How about cooling capability per dB for those of us who want to cool quietly and relatively cheaply? I don't care what cools the most. I'm not overclocking. What I care about is cooling enough without having to hear it.

  3. Re:Silver by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Because the difference of the temperatures between the surrounding environment and the cooler is very small (a few ten degrees) so that radiated energy is nearly the same as absorbed (T1^4/ T2^4 is close to1). Also radiation surface is small (internal surfaces do not count - what is radiated by one is absorbed another surface) so in general only conventional heat exchange and airflow plays significant role.
    For that temperature differences having black anodizing is more-less just a fashion like having oxygen-free monster cables...

  4. Re:Silver by Cinder6 · · Score: 5, Informative

    "High End CPU Cooler" is as much of a scam as "High End Bottled Water".

    No, it really isn't. Besides having quantifiably better cooling capabilities, these high-end coolers are often much quieter. I have a Noctua NH-D14, and while it's not as pretty as, say, the Thermaltake FioOCK from TFA, I find it far superior to any stock solution I've ever used. I can't even hear the thing, despite it having two 120mm fans.

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    If you can't convince them, convict them.
  5. Re:Silver by compro01 · · Score: 4, Informative

    But seriously, I use the stock fan/heatsink that comes with the CPU and even with video encoding pushing all 6 cores to almost 100% I have no problems. "High End CPU Cooler" is as much of a scam as "High End Bottled Water".

    Well yeah. The stock heatsink is intended to keep it within the manufacturer's thermal envelope under normal use conditions.

    If you go outside the "normal use conditions" (overclocking, high ambient temperature, etc.) or want to get under the normal envelope (for potentially increased component longevity, etc. or want a unit with a bigger, slower spinning fan so it's quieter), a better cooler may be necessary.

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    upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
  6. Re:Silver by mcvos · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Not just overclocking, but noise. Many high end coolers are very quiet (some even passive), whereas stock coolers tend to be very noisy.

  7. Diamond Beats Everything by Dialecticus · · Score: 4, Informative

    If they were really high-end they would be Gold.

    It's a little known fact, but diamond has the highest thermal conductivity of any substance you're ever likely to encounter, beating silver by a whopping 350%. The only reason it's never used for thermal applications is that forming it into arbitrary shapes is almost beyond mankind's capability, and even if we did manage to do it, the cost would be astronomical. However, if it could somehow be done, and done cheaply, it would be the ultimate heat sink material.

    For comparison purposes, gold has about 33% higher thermal conductivity than aluminum, copper beats gold by about 26%, and silver in turn beats copper by about 7%, but not one of them is even in same league as diamond.

    This is most likely why diamonds earned the nickname "ice". You know how, at room temperature, metal feels colder than wood or plastic? This is because its higher thermal conductivity pulls the heat out of your hand more quickly. If you were to pick up a large enough diamond, it would feel extremely cold at first, just like a piece of ice.

  8. Re:Silver by CBravo · · Score: 3, Insightful

    slower turning fans: quietness.

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    nosig today