Benchmarking - Thermal

When benchmarking the Temjin 6, we test the temperatures of key components including the actual CPU temperature, the actual temperature inside the heatsink, the temperatures of the DDR, Northbridge, Southbridge, HDD, PSU, and the ambient temperature inside the case, all during normal operation. During our testing, the PSU and CPU heatsink fans remain on to measure temperatures during normal system operations

Chaintech VNF3-250
AMD Athlon 64 3200+
OCZ PC3200 DDR x 2
Zalman CNPS7000 Copper
Seagate Barracuda 120GB SATA
ATI 9800XT AGP8x
OCZ 520W PowerStream



Click to enlarge.
Since we have updated our test bed motherboard from a VIA chipset board to an nForce chipset board, the Northbridge results should be read as temperatures of the single nForce chip. Southbridge results are not associated with nForce boards and are therefore not applicable.

The thermal readings for the key components and points on the motherboard during operation were as follows:

Thermal Benchmarks - CPU

Thermal Benchmarks - Heat sink

Thermal Benchmarks - HDD

Thermal Benchmarks - DDR

Thermal Benchmarks - Northbridge(VIA)/nForce Chip(nForce)

Thermal Benchmarks - Southbridge(VIA Chipset Only)

Thermal Benchmarks - Power Supply

Thermal Benchmarks - System Ambient

The wind tunnel design isolated the heat off the CPU heatsink from the rest of the system, which kept the ambient temperature in the case to a minimum. Since the dual 120mm fans concentrated on cooling the memory and CPU, thermal levels were kept to the extreme minimum, proving SilverStone's patented system to be 100% effective! We definitely hope to see this in future designs.

Installation Benchmarking - Sound
Comments Locked

28 Comments

View All Comments

  • PuravSanghani - Saturday, September 25, 2004 - link

    Also, looks are a matter of personal preference. Like they say, "One mans garbage, is another mans treasure." or something like that. ;)
  • PuravSanghani - Saturday, September 25, 2004 - link

    #5: I agree that a "miesely 80mm fan" wouldnt be able to do the job of cooling a system in a regular ATX case, but again, the use of that clear plastic casing to separate the hottest running components, CPU and RAM, helps keep that heat from circulating to the rest of the case, specifically by moving it out the back.
  • pirred908 - Saturday, September 25, 2004 - link

    #5
    -What wrong with it being top heavy? Are you affraid its going to tip over?! It probably weighs a ton.
    -The noise was measured from a foot away. If your that close you your computer, your wierd.
    -Anyone who cares about cooling doesn't use stock fans anyway. I'd be switching them out ASAP for high CFM high pressure fans.
    -Vertically mounted HDD's is probably a better idea, I agree.
    -The case is HUGE, you don't need a removable motherbaord tray. Anandtech entioned that.

    I think its a great case, and I'm not trying to badger you, I'm just making counter points.
  • Subhuman25 - Saturday, September 25, 2004 - link

    Whata rubbish review.
    The case looks awful.Sure it's not a gawdy comic book character looking case,but it's also not very appealing to my conservative eyes.
    Top heavy.No dust filters.
    Is the cooling that extraordinary to warrant such a high noise level trade-off?? I think not.
    Speaking of cooling,what about the rest of the components in the case i.e. Northbridge chip,video card,mosfets etc.?
    They're left to a miesely 80mm fan?
    Can vertical mounted hard drives be a good idea?
    The stylus now has to fight gravity in one direction when searching the platters.No?
    No vibration dampening grommets mentioned.No removable MB tray.
    I/O panel positioned too low.




  • epiv - Saturday, September 25, 2004 - link

  • Avalon - Saturday, September 25, 2004 - link

    49db if your head is within 12" of the case. If it's on the floor and you're in a chair, it's going to sound a bit quieter. This case's thermal properties sound awesome. I wouldn't mind the noise either. I'm running an open case right now with a volcano 7+ set to medium, so the Silverstone wouldn't bother me a bit.
  • Gooberslot - Saturday, September 25, 2004 - link

    I think this review understates the sound issue. 49db is definitely not quiet.
  • Zepper - Saturday, September 25, 2004 - link

    Good review. It's too bad that Silverstone doesn't get someone in there that really understands what's going on. So close, but no cigar. I still think the Berserker is the best one in their lineup and they had nothing to do with the internal design of it.
    .bh.

    got the first one in again - whassamatta you?

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now