Socket-A / Socket-370 Cooler Roundup - July 2000
by Tillmann Steinbrecher on July 14, 2000 7:57 PM EST- Posted in
- Cases/Cooling/PSUs
With a conventional heatsink,
the fan is always spinning at the same speed, no matter how much cooling is
actually necessary. If the CPU is currently running cool, then this means
that the cooler creates a lot of unnecessary noise... But there's a simple
solution to this problem: a cooler with a temperature-controlled fan. Until
now, such units were not widely available. RDJD is probably the first manufacturer
that makes coolers with temperature controlled fans available to the masses.
One of these heatsinks is the P715, designed for FCPGA CPUs. The P715 uses
the same heatsink as the P710, but comes with a smaller, temperature-controlled
fan.
The
fan
The fan, produced by JMC, will spin at 1530-4620 rpm, depending on the temperature. The thermal sensor (the little blue thing - or "NTC", for the experts - you can see on the image) isn't very smartly placed though - it actually measures the temperature of the airflow, not of the heatsink itself. Nevertheless, the temperature control works very well, it willl keep the CPU at a constant temperature, and unless you run your PC under extreme temperature conditions, the cooler will be exceptionally silent.
Unfortunately, the fan does
not support rpm monitoring (the third wire from the fan is a "rotor lock signal"
wire, and not a "rpm signal" lead). That is a pity, since with a temperature-controlled
fan, it would be even more interesting to know at which rpm the fan is currently
spinning...
Just like the P710, the P715
reached us without a clip, so we can't make any comments on installation. The
P715 comes with a thermal pad; however, we tested the heatsink with thermal
compound.
Conclusion
It's about time that somebody came up with a temperature-controlled cooler. The P715 is definitely not the cooler overclockers will choose, but for anybody who isn't overclocking, low noise is more important than cooling performance. So if you do not have any overclocking plans, the P715 is a great choice. It will provide adequate cooling for non-overclocked CPUs, and it is much more silent than any other cooler in this comparison. Plus, it is inexpensive!
RDJD K715 |
Fans:
One JMC 60x25mm
Fan
rpm: n/a (max. 4620 according to mfr spec)
Weight: 170g
Height: 60mm DIMM slots blocked on P3B-F: 1 Price: around $14.50 |
Advantages |
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Disadvantages |
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