Page 2 of 2 FirstFirst 12
Results 26 to 37 of 37

Thread: EXCLUSIVE - Thermalright MUX 120 LGA 1156 cooler

  1. #26
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Posts
    271
    i will never understand why people with thousands of dollars invested in their systems still choose to go air.
    Last edited by osiris999; 01-17-2010 at 08:03 AM.
    3770k
    asrock z77 extreme6
    G.SKILL Sniper F3-17000CL9Q-16GBSR
    asus 5870
    wd 1tb black
    Crucial M4 CT128M4SSD

  2. #27
    Xtreme Addict
    Join Date
    Nov 2003
    Location
    NYC
    Posts
    1,592
    because high end air is comparable to a "normal" watercooling kit at a lower price, easier to install and maintain and lower risk for component damage?

  3. #28
    Xtreme Mentor
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Location
    Oxford, England
    Posts
    3,433
    Quote Originally Posted by Levish View Post
    because high end air is comparable to a "normal" watercooling kit at a lower price, easier to install and maintain and lower risk for component damage?
    whats do you class as high end cooling ?

    i had true pressure modded and lapped with 2 3000rpm+ fans... and it still got up to 75~80 under load depending on ambient, with my cheap loops of £150... it hasnt gone over 37*C its 3 times the price... and really worth it
    "Cast off your fear. Look forward. Never stand still, retreat and you will age. Hesitate and you will die. SHOUT! My name is…"
    //James

  4. #29
    Xtreme Cruncher
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Location
    Los Angeles/Hong Kong
    Posts
    3,058
    Quote Originally Posted by lundrog View Post
    Looking at a EVGA 123-CD-E635-KR, recommended cooler?

    Need to mount a XFX 285 under it.
    If want Air Cooling at best for LGA1156, get the Venomous X. The X is the current TR flagship.

    BTW you can ask this in the air-cooling section, not the news section
    Team XS: xs4s.org



  5. #30
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Posts
    337
    Quote Originally Posted by Jamesrt2004 View Post
    whats do you class as high end cooling ?

    i had true pressure modded and lapped with 2 3000rpm+ fans... and it still got up to 75~80 under load depending on ambient, with my cheap loops of £150... it hasnt gone over 37*C its 3 times the price... and really worth it
    Without a doubt, if I wind up going to core i7 I've concluded it's time to drop the air cooling. It just dones't make sense anymore. Air coolers are getting so expensive that it really makes more sense to simply buy a water block when switching sockets. (assuming you've already bought a good radiator, pump, and fans) Comparable cost, but way better performance out of water.
    System: Core I7 920 @ 4200MHz 1.45vCORE 1.35VTT 1.2vIOH // EVGA x58 Classified E760 // 6GB Dominator GT 1866 @ 1688 6-7-6-18 1T 1.65V // Intel X25 80GB // PCP&C 750W Silencer
    Cooling: Heatkiller 3.0 LT CPU block // 655 Pump // GTX360 Radiator
    Sound: X-FI Titanium HD --> Marantz 2265 --> JBL 4311WXA's
    Display: GTX480 // Sony GDM-FW900

  6. #31
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Location
    Poland
    Posts
    199
    Quote Originally Posted by Jamesrt2004 View Post
    whats do you class as high end cooling ?

    i had true pressure modded and lapped with 2 3000rpm+ fans... and it still got up to 75~80 under load depending on ambient, with my cheap loops of £150... it hasnt gone over 37*C its 3 times the price... and really worth it
    What do you mean by "cheap loops of Ł150"? What exactly is in this loop. And I guess there should be "it hasnt gone over 73*C..

  7. #32
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Nov 2009
    Location
    Canada
    Posts
    202
    Quote Originally Posted by osiris999 View Post
    i will never understand why people with thousands of dollars invested in their systems still choose to go air.
    Because high end air is cheap as hell compared to high end watercooling.
    A single Heatkiller 3.0 can get you 2 U-120Es (in Canada). Pump = 40-70$.
    Rad = 50$-150$, res = 20$-60$, full coverage waterblock = 90-120$. CPU block - 40$-130$, Mosfets/NB - 50-80$.

    Watercooling adds up to a lot more than air cooling. With the $$ invested though, you get some amazing as hell temps though..

  8. #33
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Posts
    337
    Quote Originally Posted by Necetra View Post
    Because high end air is cheap as hell compared to high end watercooling.
    A single Heatkiller 3.0 can get you 2 U-120Es (in Canada). Pump = 40-70$.
    Rad = 50$-150$, res = 20$-60$, full coverage waterblock = 90-120$. CPU block - 40$-130$, Mosfets/NB - 50-80$.

    Watercooling adds up to a lot more than air cooling. With the $$ invested though, you get some amazing as hell temps though..
    I understand where you're coming from, because this used to be exactly what I thought. What changed my mind? A few points..

    1) Unless you're going to watercool EVERYTHING in your system (MOBO, Vidoeo card, mem, hard drives), then most of your costs are one time. Your money spent on a good rad, pump, hose, fans and fittings really is only a one time expense.

    2) Remember, you're buying an aftermarket HSF to do one thing. Cool the CPU.

    3) With 1 and 2 in mind, you're only buying a CPU waterblock when you upgrade your system.

    A good waterblock is roughly the same cost as a good high end HSF, and both are doing the same job. But waterblock will perform way better.
    System: Core I7 920 @ 4200MHz 1.45vCORE 1.35VTT 1.2vIOH // EVGA x58 Classified E760 // 6GB Dominator GT 1866 @ 1688 6-7-6-18 1T 1.65V // Intel X25 80GB // PCP&C 750W Silencer
    Cooling: Heatkiller 3.0 LT CPU block // 655 Pump // GTX360 Radiator
    Sound: X-FI Titanium HD --> Marantz 2265 --> JBL 4311WXA's
    Display: GTX480 // Sony GDM-FW900

  9. #34
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Posts
    469
    Quote Originally Posted by Monstru View Post
    Leeghoofd - amen to that brother

    sholvaco - AFAIK Noctua supplied free LGA 1366 mounting kits to all Noctua owners right after launch, and now they are doing the same. If you have the receipt for your Noctua heatsink, just write them an email and they will ship the new NM-I3 mounting (I got mine weeks ago).



    monstru, what fan is that in your photo? it looks interesting

  10. #35
    Champion
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Romania, lab501.ro
    Posts
    1,707
    Coolink SwiF2 120P
    Weissbier - breakfast of champions



  11. #36
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Posts
    271
    Quote Originally Posted by Rock&Roll View Post
    I understand where you're coming from, because this used to be exactly what I thought. What changed my mind? A few points..

    1) Unless you're going to watercool EVERYTHING in your system (MOBO, Vidoeo card, mem, hard drives), then most of your costs are one time. Your money spent on a good rad, pump, hose, fans and fittings really is only a one time expense.

    2) Remember, you're buying an aftermarket HSF to do one thing. Cool the CPU.

    3) With 1 and 2 in mind, you're only buying a CPU waterblock when you upgrade your system.

    A good waterblock is roughly the same cost as a good high end HSF, and both are doing the same job. But waterblock will perform way better.
    100% agree and a lot of people i see buying new heatsinks on the same systems. a new waterblock is only 50-60$.
    3770k
    asrock z77 extreme6
    G.SKILL Sniper F3-17000CL9Q-16GBSR
    asus 5870
    wd 1tb black
    Crucial M4 CT128M4SSD

  12. #37
    Xtreme Addict
    Join Date
    Nov 2003
    Location
    NYC
    Posts
    1,592
    along that same line of thinking a new i5/i7 bracket is 5-15$ for most heatsinks and some of them are sent free of charge

Page 2 of 2 FirstFirst 12

Bookmarks

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •