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The Cooling Articles and reviews
- CPU Cooler Charts 2008, Part II - Junk or Jewel?
- CPU Cooler Charts 2008, Part I - Loosing your Cool?
- Ultimate Budget Overclocking Box - A 3.5 GHz Core 2 System with a...
- Finding The World's Best Hardware Prices: Shop Globally
- Comparing Water Coolers: We Follow Your Lead
- Keeping Your CPU Going If Your Cooler Fails
- Cooler Master CM690 : The happy medium?
- How Cool Are Thermalright's Graphics Card Coolers?
- Extreme FSB: Taking the E6750 Beyond 4 GHz
- Radical CPU Coolers from CoolIT



You slip into German on page 7 around half way up.
I thought hes got to be kidding then I looked down page 7 and lmao. Its a whole paragraph in German.
Question to the article creator; Is this the last in the cpu cooler charts 2008?
How come the Arctic Freezer Pro 7 was not covered in this series? It's quite a popular cooler and I would be interested in seeing how it compares (as that's what I'm using).
You slip into German on page 7 around half way up.
My apologies.
Thanks for the heads-up...
We translators also have our off days. Consider me awake now
However I have had some pleasant surprises; a lot of the boxed AMD processors I have bought (S393 and AM2 in medium speed ranges), have had pretty good coolers. Granted they run on cool processors so they aren't really pushed to the limit, but they do perform excellent: low-noise, good cooling, good MTBF, and decent overclocking results.
Something else I've also noticed - price doesn't buy a good cooler. Some of the more expensive devices are very noisy, bulky and (as I did), you end up wondering where you went wrong. I've bought expensive coolers with copper fins and small fans and had to remove them..they're simply too noisy. I replaced them with devices from Cooler Master etc (some of which were the cheapest I could find i.e. bargain basement), and have had no problems whatsoever. I don't work for Cooler Master but credit is where credit's due - they do their job and they generally do it well.
I think you can get a good boxed cooler, but it's the luck of the draw depending on the platform and particular processor model. If you have an overtly noisy cooler you can always alter your BIOS settings to only spin the fan up when a critical point is reached. Most CPU's just run idle a lot of the time so there's no point suffering or wasting electricity.
p.s. Please..please..manufacturers, you know the LED fans? Please put a switch on them will ya?