Socket-A Cooler Roundup: September 2001
by Tillmann Steinbrecher on September 7, 2001 3:19 AM EST- Posted in
- Cases/Cooling/PSUs
The Test
The first test was done with a 43 watt heat load - this corresponds to the typical power usage of a 1 GHz Palomino CPU. The temperature readings given here is the temperature difference between core and ambient temperature. As usual, lower temperature readings are better.
(1) the Miprocool was tested with the temperature controlled fan at maximum
speed
Since in the 43W test, the top-performing coolers are very close to each other,
we also publish the results of a test with a higher heat load - here, performance
differences become more obvious. The second test (with the best-performing coolers
from the first test) was done with a 61W heat load. This corresponds to
the typical power usage of a 1.3GHz Thunderbird CPU.
Here are the results of the 61W test; remember, lower temperatures are better:
(2) from the March 01 cooler roundup
Our "simulator" would not allow testing of the less efficient coolers in this
roundup at 61W, since the foil heater used would overheat. We are already working
on a new simulator device that allows cooler testing with a heat load of 100-150W,
to represent the cooling requirements of future CPUs. Details about this will
be published before the next roundup, in a new "testing methodology" article.
By now, the AMD Athlon MP (Palomino) with its internal diode for temperature
measurements has become available. However, the temperature readings taken from
that diode aren't accurate enough for a meaningful performance test. If you
look at how small the performance differences between some cooler models in
this test are, it will become obvious that a temperature measurement with a
resolution of 1°C isn't accurate enough. However, the fact that now an AMD
CPU with on-die temperature measurement is available has given us the opportunity
to check whether our "simulator" represents the real-world situation accurately.
The difference between the C/W values calculated from our test data, and the
C/W values calculated from test data obtained with the Palomino's internal diode
is around 10% (based on the Silverado test data published in c't magazine, issue
17/01).
You may be wondering why our test results are in some cases (e.g. the Silverado)
so much different from the test results published on other websites. We are
aware of this, but there's nothing we can do about it. We've double and triple-checked
our results. The only advice we can give is: Check which testing methodology
is used for that particular test, and decide for yourself which review to believe.
Information about our current testing methodology
can be found here.
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