Thermaltake Dragon Orb 3 

Thermaltake's previous coolers often had an interesting outlook, and their Dragon Orb follows this tradition:

cooler photo
 

Previous Thermaltake 'Orb' models had the fan integrated into the heatsink. This, however, limited fan size. With the Dragon Orb, Thermaltake solves this problem by mounting the fan on top of the cooler. The lower part of the cooler looks similar (but not identical) to older Orb models; the fan is mounted in an aluminum case with a copper-color andoization. The heatsink features a copper inlay, which makes it quite heavy.

The copper core


The copper core features it's own little copper heatsink. However, it is located directly below the fan motor, so it can't take advantage of much air flow.

View from below

Installation and clip

The Dragon Orb is quite heavy, but thanks to its good clip, which uses all six cleats on the socket, can be fixed safely.

Performance and noise, conclusion

We tested two version of the Dragon Orb: One with 3000rpm fan, and one with 7000rpm fan. Noise-wise, the 7000rpm version was even a little worse than the Delta 7000rpm fan, but performance-wise, the Dragon Orb is quite a bit behind other recent coolers equiped with that 7000rpm fan - so we can't recommend the high RPM version for overclockers. We don't recommend the 3000rpm version for a quiet PC either - it is too loud for the cooling performance it provides (even though it is still efficient enough to cool all current non-overclocked Socket A/370 CPUs).

 
Thermaltake Dragon Orb
Fan: Evercool 60x25mm style without case  (7000rpm or 3000rpm)
Price: Around $32
Advantages
  • Looks cool
  • Good clip
Disadvantages
  • Neither the 7000rpm model nor the 3000rpm model provides a good performance/noise ration
Thermosonic/Thermal Integration Thermoengine Swiftech MCX370
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