Test de l'Aquagate de Cooler Master

Ecrit par Rabot le 2004-09-20 à 18:10:19
Type : news - Test
Source : Tweaktown

"The majority of Club Overclocker visitors would probably jump at an opportunity to water cool their CPU in pursuit of more Megahertz. Strangely enough, there are those that still scoff at the idea of water cooling and are heard uttering the overly quoted "water and electronics don´t mix." Skillful (and some unskillful) Overclockers have been using water cooling gear for over five years now. Today, large companies are focusing their industrial dollar on the concept, which has helped put some of the intimidation that once stemmed from H 2 O cooling, at rest. Even some pre-built "PCs in a box" are coming with a self-contained water cooling unit installed instead of an air-cooled heatsink/fan combo. With the quality of products available today, the risks associated with water cooling are next to nil, provided that users take their time during the setup process. "

Dimensions  220mm (L) x 148mm (W) x 88mm (H)
Case Material Aluminum
Fan Dimension 80 x 80 x 25
Fan Speed (RPM) 2000 / 3100 / 4600 - Selectable -
Fan Bearing Type Rifle Bearing
Fan Voltage 12V
Noise Levels (dB) 23 / 34 / 49
Power Supply AC Power 110v/220v
DC Power 12V
Power Consumption AC 9 Watts
DC 2.2 Watts
Water Block Copper and Acrylic
Weight 2kg (main unit) 5kg total
Thermal Resistance RCA .31 / .25 / .23 C/W
(tested with Pentium 4 @ 3.06GHz)
Application AMD K7 (Socket 462)
K8 (Socket 754/940)
Pentium 4 (Socket 478)

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