Cooler Master



The Hyper L3 is a quick replacement for the stock Intel Core 2 Duo heatsink/fan. The unit features an all copper base with nickel plating, aluminum fin construction, and three heat pipes along with a 92mmfan to cool your Conroe. The fan moves about 49CFM at around an 18dBA level. We plan on testing this unit shortly.



One of the more unusual coolers we noticed was this Hyper Sphere unit that features an asymmetric heatsink and gliding fan duct design for cooling the VRM area along with the processor. Airflow and dBA numbers have not yet been released, but we are told the unit will perform very well while offering competitive noise levels with the intelligent fan speed control unit.



A design from the 1950's is the Space Navi. It has a universal retention mechanism and is designed for silent operation while providing better than stock cooling performance.



The X-Dream 775 is another Core 2 Duo inspired cooler with a copper base and frameless aluminum fin construction designed for near silent operation.



The X-Dream K640 is a low profile K8 design designed for tight case enclosure areas that still require excellent heat dissipation.

Cooler Master Zalman
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  • VooDooAddict - Tuesday, June 20, 2006 - link

    I've seen blurbs like this before for the F5000 ... Question still remains though ... what video system will be used? I'd love to see a 7900 GS or GTX in there.
  • Kougar - Sunday, June 18, 2006 - link

    That very last paragraph was worth the entire article! But thanks for the extra coverage too. ;)

    Don't forget to throw in some 32bit vs 64bit comparisons, since some benches are showing Conroe is finally delivering some on that potential 64bit advantage! I'm very much wondering if Vista x64 will show the same advantages over Vista x86... especially considering that the former is 4.1gb and the latter is a 3.1gb file size when I downloaded them both...

    BTW, need some extra security for your luggage? I'll even offer my services for free... :D
  • Lord Evermore - Saturday, June 17, 2006 - link

    That MR5S1, does it just plug into any old eSATA port if you get the SATA option? Seems like a sweet setup to get any RAID configuration you want, and I assume high performance using a hardware controller. How much is that gonna cost? A 3-bay unit seems like a good option they should have too, instead of only the 1, 2 and 5 bay units in the picture. 3 bays seems like just the right point for a user who wants high performance without quite going all the way to 5 drives, and it'd be a good size to hide away. Anybody else make similar products?
  • Howard - Saturday, June 17, 2006 - link

    Is that a heat piped HS I see?
  • Gary Key - Saturday, June 17, 2006 - link

    quote:

    Is that a heat piped HS I see?


    It is. I tried to get a close up with the display case open but no go. In fact, a couple of the OEM/ODM power supply manufacturers prohibted close up pictures of their products. It was strange to me as they were happy to provide brochures with bascially the same screenshots I wanted to take.
  • Per Hansson - Sunday, June 18, 2006 - link

    Would be interesting to see how it was designed, every single watercooled PSU I've seen for example puts the primary (230VAC) and secondary (12DC and lower) diodes and mosfets on the same heatsink. They are only shielded by a thin thermal pad... So if something goes wrong there is high risk of 230VAC on the Secondary side, you can guess the effect on the computers components...

    Simple test; take a digital multimeter and set it to AC and measure from the chassi to the primary heatsink, on most designs you will read 160VAC... Now guess what would happen if you connected that heatsink to the other, and then imagine that the watercooled PSU I taked about above only prevents the short with a thin thermal pad...
  • Per Hansson - Saturday, June 17, 2006 - link

    Sure looks so... I still do not understand why they have the cover on these units at a tradeshow...

    But it is probably to not reveal that they all use crap capacitors, everyone except Zippy and Seasonic (select models) use crap capacitors so...

    Guess it's good for business when your products only hold togheter for 3 years and then start giving the computer random lockup problems due to too much ripple current being let through?!

    Sigh...
  • Operandi - Saturday, June 17, 2006 - link

    Actually all of Zalman’s PSUs are built by Forton-Source, so their definitely one of the better ones out there.
  • Per Hansson - Sunday, June 18, 2006 - link

    Yup, that is right, it is an excallent design, however it such a shame that they have to spoil it with OST and Capxon capacitors :(

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