They're soldered in
I don't know if the TRUE's heatpipes are as physically strong as HDT heatpipes though...too much pressure on one when you go to mount it and it might break, that'd be my worry (though it's probably not valid).
Pre-order yours today!
http://www.frozencpu.com/products/85..._Feb_10th.html
An apple a day keeps the doctor away. A Chuck Norris a day kills.
wow 130!!!!! i can get a recertified complete water cooling setup in thermaltake for 100 bucks
Even if it comes close to a TRUECu....it has to compete in terms of value with a Mugen 2 that's $100 less expensive...
Minor test details (this is just a teaser), that's a lapped and washer modded TRUECu vs. a stock Mugen 2. <1900RPM is an S-Flex G (or 2) and at ~2950RPM is an Ultra Kaze 3000 (or 2). Average of three mounts for each. dT = Average loaded temp minus average ambient temp over a 10 minute span of sustained load via OCCT. QX6700 running at 8x400 with 1.45v loaded![]()
Last edited by Vapor; 01-28-2009 at 08:19 PM.
Vapor, that QX6700 at high volts, would be the PERFECT cpu to test those high end aircoolers. That is one moster cpu in terms of heat. You know that, I am sure. No newer cpu can't put that kinda stress to the heatsink without chip killing volts. People testing this high end coolers with 65W quads, and dual cores, are clueless. With these low heat chips, the results can be just random.
I hope you can get a V10 soon, and make a direct comparison with that QX6700, between V10, TRUEcu, TRUE, MUGEN2 and other goodies if possible. But the V10 x TRUEcu is obviously the most awaited one.
And please, use Panaflo's 38mm on the review if possible.
To be honest, if you do this kinda review, I won't need to look into any other review of these coolers. This would be the perfect comparison.
Last edited by Simps; 01-28-2009 at 08:36 PM.
I probably won't be getting a V10, too expensive considering its lack of usefulness for me. Only reason I got a TRUECu, other than its inherent improvement over a TRUE, is because I could just plop it on a board with no mounting bracket and it was heavy and compact enough to maintain good to great contact
And no Panaflos...not suited for HSF testingNot enough RPM range is the biggest reason (IMO, it really helps both testing quickness and the usefulness of interpolation if you use the same fan for as much of the RPM range as possible), the other is that by now it's an atypical fan to find in systems--even the L1 is too loud for most people's tastes. A lot of HSFs these days also somewhat abandon support for 38mm thick fans
(Mugen 2 is one of them)
I'll be adding to and fully fleshing out this review over time, each HSF takes about 1.5-2 days to test if I dedicate all my free time to itOn the bench right now is a S1284EE
I'll always recommend looking at all well-done reviews, the more data points the better considering the inherent variation in HSFs![]()
the mugen 2 looks good!!!! looks like ill be replacin the s1283 soon. awaiting ur reviews
ULGY ??
I love it no matter ifs not the best cooler!
Its a nice piece of design in my eyes!
Everything extra is bad!
^ Interesting results, Vapour. Look forward to your full results
Mugen 2 is a steal of a deal for $40-50
Last edited by icecold316; 01-29-2009 at 01:05 PM.
I7 - Batch - Overclocking Sheet
Current Rig Specs :
I7 920 @ (19x205) 3.89 Ghz @ 1.26 Idle & 1.248 Load - Batch 3841A431
Gigabyte UD5 on F5e
Corsair Dominator 3 x 2GB (1600 Mhz)
Evga GTX 260 216 SP
Coolermaster RP-850Watt
WD 500GB SATAII 3.0GBPS
Scythe Mugen 2(Server specs for Online Dating)
That is what confused me. Since Mugen 2 was not tested under 3000 RPM or in short beyond 2k rpm. Was the ultra kaze 3k RPM used in testing.<1900RPM is an S-Flex G (or 2) and at ~2950RPM is an Ultra Kaze 3000 (or 2)
Nevermind, finally understood the meaning of it.
Mugen 2 doesn't include clips that work with 38mm fans so I didn't bother putting the UK3s on it![]()
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