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| by AkG | December 4, 2008 | ||
| Value ValueThe term “Value” is such an amorphous term that it truly has different meanings for different people. For some a CPU cooler is only as good as it overclocking potential, for others it is how quiet it does its job; for others still it’s how effective it is for its cost. We here at HWC try to provide as many answers as possible for the term “Value”. Hopefully by this point in the review people looking at OC potential or loudness levels will have a fairly good idea of what its Value is. For the “best bang for the buck” crowd we have included a chart below showing how much each 1*c less costs when compared to Intel’s FREE stock cooler. No consideration has been made for noise levels, “looks” or any other extraneous factors; this is just raw performance vs. monetary cost. For any cooler which performs worse than the Intel stock cooler a rating of “FAIL” will be given. For any cooler which has a “Value” of more than $10 per 1*C a rating of “FAIL” will be used in the graph but the chart will list its actual “value”. All prices are based on either their MSRP (if no e-tailer prices were available at review time) or the online price they sold for at the time of their review. IF a CPU cooler does not include a fan the price of a Scythe F has been included ($12). To make it as easy as possible for you to modify this ratio we have also included the various coolers temperature difference so if you do come across one of them on sale you can easily modify its “Value” rating. We here at HWC are in no way saying this is the definitive answer to “Value”, rather it should be considered another tool to help you make your final decision. After all something is only as “valuable” as what you consider it to be. E4600 Cooling Value Please Note: This chart has be calculated based upon the differences between Intel stock cooler’s average load at its highest OC on a e4600 @3.2GHz versus various after market coolers average load temperatures (in their stock configuration with MX-2 TIM) also on a e4600 @ 3.2GHz. ![]() When it comes to dual core CPUs, the Gelid Silent Spirit is a darn good value and is only the third cooler to ever break the $2 mark. The fact that it does this while being one of the quietest CPU cooling solutions we have ever tested is just icing on the cake. In the end the Silent Spirit is one heck of a good deal for dual cores systems. Q6600 Cooling Value Please Note: This chart has be calculated based upon the differences between Intel stock cooler’s average load at its highest OC on a Q6600 @3.0GHz versus various after market coolers average load temperatures (in their stock configuration with stock TIM) also on a Q6600 @ 3.0GHz. ![]() ![]() When it comes to quad core systems, things are not as rosy as they are with the dual core value. As we recently said with the OCZ Gladiator Max, a little bit over three dollars is not a bad value, but it certainly isn't a great one either. The only mitigating fact is silence is costly and if silence is important than a mere $3.16 value is actually a pretty good value. It really is all in how you look at it, and what you consider to be a priority. | ||
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