Home >>
Web Links >>
Aircooling
(2129)
Aircooling
DeepCool is a Beijing based company that is totally focused on cooling electronics. Of course, with a name like DeepCool, they’d be hypocrites if they weren’t. Their products vary from iPad cooling stands to CPU and server coolers. It’s all about lowering thermals for this company! Today we’ll be putting their top of the line, Neptwin, twin tower CPU cooler through it’s paces. This air cooler packs 6 heat pipes, a pretty massive copper base, and dual fans. Follow along and we’ll see if this cooler has what it takes to get you to the next level of overclocking.
Aircooling
A new version of the well known Buffalo cpu cooler with support for the LGA1366 format. Overall a good product.
Aircooling
Today we bring you yet another review of a product from Be Quiet, who perhaps is the most well known German manufacturer of PC-related products. A few weeks ago we had a look at their Dark Rock Advanced C1, a very high quality CPU cooler; today we are going to test and review its monstrous brother, the Dark Rock Pro C1 CPU cooler.
Aircooling
Phanteks pushes forward with another tower in their line-up; take a look at the new PH-TC12DX.
Aircooling
Today we are reviewing the Cooler Master Hyper 612 PWM CPU cooler, which has a huge tower heatsink, six heatpipes and a 120 mm fan. Check it out!
Aircooling
A well designed product from Thermaltake with good performance and high price. It didn't performed exactly how we would wanted, compared with other products.
Aircooling
Is Antec's latest entry into the quiet fan market a hit in performance? We have the results.
Aircooling
Mit dem K2 schickt die EKL-Endkundentochter Alpenföhn einen imposanten Zwillingsturm-Kühler für AMD- und Intel-Prozessoren ins Rennen. Mit acht Heatpipes und kombinierter 120-/140-mm-Doppelbelüftung ausgestattet, soll der K2 für neue Bestmarken sorgen. ComputerBase hat den knapp 1,4 Kilogramm schweren Koloss getestet.
Aircooling
Canada -- the country full of ice. We live in igloos made from blocks of snow, ride dog sleighs to work, and, as bad as weather may seem, winter takes up almost twelve out of the twelve months of the year. There are a few months in between filled with surprising weather where you can't predict when will happen the next day, and such variable patterns are especially true here at APH Networks Calgary. For those who live in this city, you will know what I am talking about. Generally speaking, we can safely say that Canada might as well be the cold Arctic in the north with strange weather patterns. So how is technology able to survive in such a country? Well, while our awesome weather can provide natural phase change cooling for pretty much anything and everything, I don't think electronics would appreciate all the snow, and neither would I appreciate sitting in the snow all day. After all, it is much more comfortable in my igloo. Being a Canadian citizen for quite a number of years now, there is a company that always easily pops into my mind when it comes to CPU cooling, and that is Arctic Cooling. Not 'arctic cooling' as in opening my window, but actually Arctic Cooling, the company. (Take that, global warming!) Let me remind you that not too long ago, we have reviewed one of Arctic Cooling's heatsinks -- specifically, the Arctic Cooling Freezer 13. Today, what we have next to it is its bigger brother, the Arctic Cooling Freezer 13 Pro. I don't know about you, but as for myself, I always have a tendency of fighting with my younger brother over things, especially when we were young. But being the older one myself, in a completely unbiased and objective manner, it is usually the bigger brother who's better at these things. Therefore, as this logic carries forward in our review today, the question to ask is not whether the bigger Freezer 13 Pro is better than the little Freezer 13. The question to ask is how much better is the Freezer 13 Pro. Read on to find out what we have found!
Aircooling
IPhobya are a big name that we would traditionally associated with water cooling products like radiators, yet water cooling needs fans to work so it isn't surprising that Phobya have an extensive range of fans to choose from. The fans we have today from Phobya cover a wide variety of usage scenarios with a Red LED fan, a slimline fan for space constrained systems and a Noiseblocker fan for a great compromise between noise and performance.
Phobya aren't a brand we have encountered much before here at eTeknix and in fact I am not sure if we have ever tested any of their products before. But today we have a trio of fans from Phobya in for review. First up we have the Phobya Nano-2G 12 PWM 1500RPM Red LED fan. Next we have the Phobya G-Silent 12 Slim Edition 1800RPM fan and finally we have the Phobya NB-eLoop 1600RPM Bionic fan. We will be giving these fans our usual treatment and conducting tests with them in push-pull to bring you comparable results of 11 120mm fans in total.
Without any further ado let us take a look around each fan, its packaging and contents before giving you a performance and acoustic summary.
execution time : 0.102 sec