Recomend an 1155/1156 HSF
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Xplorer4
Senior Member
4 product reviews
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12. January 2012 @ 18:10 |
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Looking for a diffrent cooler. I currently have a Thermalright "Limited Edition" TRUE Black Ultra-120 eXtreme CPU Heatsink Rev C..and hate dealing with the spring loaded screws. So all I ask is not to recomend a cooler that has to use spring loaded screws. Budget is $50 USD but kight be able to strech that to about $70.
OS: Kubuntu 12.10/Windows 8 -- CPU: Intel Core i7 2600K -- Motherboard: MSI P67A-G45 -- Memory: 2x4GB Corsair Dominator -- Graphics Card: Sapphire 4890 Vapor-X -- Monitor: Dell 2208WFP -- Mouse: Mionix NAOS 5000 -- PSU: Corsair 520HX -- Case: Thermaltake Mozart TX -- Cooling: Thermalright TRUE Black Ultra-120 eXtreme CPU Heatsink Rev C -- Hard Drives: 1x180 GB Intel 330 SSD/1xWD 1 TB Caviar Black/1xWD 2 TB Caviar Green/2xWD 3 TB Caviar Green
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AfterDawn Addict
4 product reviews
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21. January 2012 @ 06:43 |
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Try fitting almost any other high-end cooler, and you'll wish you had the spring loaded screws back.
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Xplorer4
Senior Member
4 product reviews
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21. January 2012 @ 11:50 |
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Originally posted by sammorris: Try fitting almost any other high-end cooler, and you'll wish you had the spring loaded screws back.
Could you elaborate? I was eying a Corsair H40 or H70 atm.
OS: Kubuntu 12.10/Windows 8 -- CPU: Intel Core i7 2600K -- Motherboard: MSI P67A-G45 -- Memory: 2x4GB Corsair Dominator -- Graphics Card: Sapphire 4890 Vapor-X -- Monitor: Dell 2208WFP -- Mouse: Mionix NAOS 5000 -- PSU: Corsair 520HX -- Case: Thermaltake Mozart TX -- Cooling: Thermalright TRUE Black Ultra-120 eXtreme CPU Heatsink Rev C -- Hard Drives: 1x180 GB Intel 330 SSD/1xWD 1 TB Caviar Black/1xWD 2 TB Caviar Green/2xWD 3 TB Caviar Green
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AfterDawn Addict
15 product reviews
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24. January 2012 @ 09:04 |
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Pretty much any decent cooler comes with equipment to fit your board. My Cool-It Eco 120 is essentially the same product as the Corsair H50 and it's worked wonderfully on Socket AM2+, AM3, and LGA775. Basically any of the "all in one" water coolers like the Cool-It Eco series or the Corsair H series will be fine.
Sam has a point in some ways but not in others. To install any of the coolers you are looking at, you need to remove the board from the case and install the cooler with a backplate, where the screws pass right through the board and screw into a separate piece of material. What Sam really means to say is that there's a bit more hassle with backplate coolers because you need to do extra to remove them. But I can agree that the spring clip bastards are not the best way either. If you plan to have this cooler running for the long-haul, you shouldn't be too badly bothered by the mounting method.
AMD Phenom II X6 1100T 4GHz(20 x 200) 1.5v 3000NB 2000HT, Corsair Hydro H110 w/ 4 x 140mm 1500RPM fans Push/Pull, Gigabyte GA-990FXA-UD5, 8GB(2 x 4GB) G.Skill RipJaws DDR3-1600 @ 1600MHz CL9 1.55v, Gigabyte GTX760 OC 4GB(1170/1700), Corsair 750HX
Detailed PC Specs: http://my.afterdawn.com/estuansis/blog_entry.cfm/11388
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Xplorer4
Senior Member
4 product reviews
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24. January 2012 @ 14:02 |
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Well I do plan on it being a long term cooler, but you also have to consider the unpredictable such as a mobo dieing for whatever reason or even getting a bad mobo. Recently I got 2 bad mobos in a row. On top of that the third mobo refused to post if my gpu is in the top pci-e slot which meant alot of trouble shooting.
OS: Kubuntu 12.10/Windows 8 -- CPU: Intel Core i7 2600K -- Motherboard: MSI P67A-G45 -- Memory: 2x4GB Corsair Dominator -- Graphics Card: Sapphire 4890 Vapor-X -- Monitor: Dell 2208WFP -- Mouse: Mionix NAOS 5000 -- PSU: Corsair 520HX -- Case: Thermaltake Mozart TX -- Cooling: Thermalright TRUE Black Ultra-120 eXtreme CPU Heatsink Rev C -- Hard Drives: 1x180 GB Intel 330 SSD/1xWD 1 TB Caviar Black/1xWD 2 TB Caviar Green/2xWD 3 TB Caviar Green
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AfterDawn Addict
4 product reviews
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24. January 2012 @ 14:16 |
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Yeah I think MSI bypass QC on a lot of their boards now. The designs themselves aren't so bad, but you stand a very high chance of getting a DOA as the faulty boards aren't checked at the factory.
My point with the coolers was that while thermalright's spring-loaded screws are a pain, compared to other air coolers such as scythes, noctuas, and worst of the lot, zalmans, they are actually the lesser of numerous evils. Waterblocks will be a lot easier I suspect due to minimal weight being placed on the CPU socket.
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Xplorer4
Senior Member
4 product reviews
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24. January 2012 @ 14:26 |
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Well I am starting to agree with you on the MSI factor. Honestly, I was planning on going Gigabyte for the new board because I found out MSI charged $35 for Mobo repair in the third year of warranty. At the rate technology advances these days a 3 year old mobo is not worth a whole lot more then that typically. However, Newegg had a rebate going on it bringing the cost under $100, seemed to good to pass up, but had I known the trouble I was facing, I would have probably preferred to spend a bit more.
Anyways, how are the screws on the other brands any harder to work with?
OS: Kubuntu 12.10/Windows 8 -- CPU: Intel Core i7 2600K -- Motherboard: MSI P67A-G45 -- Memory: 2x4GB Corsair Dominator -- Graphics Card: Sapphire 4890 Vapor-X -- Monitor: Dell 2208WFP -- Mouse: Mionix NAOS 5000 -- PSU: Corsair 520HX -- Case: Thermaltake Mozart TX -- Cooling: Thermalright TRUE Black Ultra-120 eXtreme CPU Heatsink Rev C -- Hard Drives: 1x180 GB Intel 330 SSD/1xWD 1 TB Caviar Black/1xWD 2 TB Caviar Green/2xWD 3 TB Caviar Green
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AfterDawn Addict
4 product reviews
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24. January 2012 @ 14:27 |
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It's not the screws, it's everything else about the installation. E.g. even well respected review sites were covered in cuts trying to install a Zalman CNPS10X - it didn't even cool properly because they couldn't get it to sit right...
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AfterDawn Addict
15 product reviews
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24. January 2012 @ 22:16 |
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I've been covered a a fair few cuts myself from several brands. Zalmans especially :) Surface area :P
Personally have found the cooling performance to be exceptional though.
AMD Phenom II X6 1100T 4GHz(20 x 200) 1.5v 3000NB 2000HT, Corsair Hydro H110 w/ 4 x 140mm 1500RPM fans Push/Pull, Gigabyte GA-990FXA-UD5, 8GB(2 x 4GB) G.Skill RipJaws DDR3-1600 @ 1600MHz CL9 1.55v, Gigabyte GTX760 OC 4GB(1170/1700), Corsair 750HX
Detailed PC Specs: http://my.afterdawn.com/estuansis/blog_entry.cfm/11388
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mrslicker
Member
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17. February 2012 @ 22:31 |
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The Spire TherMax Eclipse II is an awesome piece of kit, I don't know if it will fit an 1155 but it will fit a 1156. Also, i can t tell you what you want to know about the fittings, but it is about 50-60 dollars for one.
EDIT: I believe it is spring-loaded posts, and it was a pain to install now that I am thinking abt it. but it stays put.
lubricant -> Mr Slicker -> ???
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 17. February 2012 @ 22:35
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Xplorer4
Senior Member
4 product reviews
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17. February 2012 @ 22:34 |
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Originally posted by mrslicker: I don't know if it will fit an 1155 but it will fit a 1156.
1155 and 1156 coolers are interchangeable despite the difference in sockets the measurements for hsf mounts are exactly the same.
As for the cooloer itself, at a glance, I am not sure it would offer much advantage over my current cooler which is very similar, but a bit less mas to it.
OS: Kubuntu 12.10/Windows 8 -- CPU: Intel Core i7 2600K -- Motherboard: MSI P67A-G45 -- Memory: 2x4GB Corsair Dominator -- Graphics Card: Sapphire 4890 Vapor-X -- Monitor: Dell 2208WFP -- Mouse: Mionix NAOS 5000 -- PSU: Corsair 520HX -- Case: Thermaltake Mozart TX -- Cooling: Thermalright TRUE Black Ultra-120 eXtreme CPU Heatsink Rev C -- Hard Drives: 1x180 GB Intel 330 SSD/1xWD 1 TB Caviar Black/1xWD 2 TB Caviar Green/2xWD 3 TB Caviar Green
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 17. February 2012 @ 22:36
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