Three High-End Liquid-Cooling Cases Compared
High-quality liquid cooling normally requires a great deal of planning and effort at moderate expense. For a few dollars more, these case and cooling systems put an end to custom fabrication and fragile external parts. Read More
- CeBIT 2008: Foxconn shows off Concept for Combined Peltier and...
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- Zalman's LQ1000 Case Integrates Liquid Cooling
- Artic Cooling's Triple Fan Graphics Cooler
- CoolIT Systems adds Graphics and Chipset Cooling
- Sparkle Announces Passively Cooled 1 GB GeForce 8800 GT Card
CeBIT 2008: Gigabyte - The Fan Becomes a Useless Argument
Source: Tom's Hardware US – Category : Cooling 0 comment
Gigabyte has a good example of the unbearable marketing trend that wants to take the smallest thing and turn it into a marketing argument. Even though the manufacturer built most of its reputation on graphic cards using passive and silent cooling systems, it now boasts a "3D active fan" as a major feature on of its graphic cards. What are the arguments? The fan is energy saver and a shield! In fact, it’s the opposite. Adding a fan will increase power consumption (in a relatively small manner, usually between 1 W to 3 W) and adds to the list of possible failures. To top it up, the fan is installed on a GeForce 8500 GT, an entry level card running modest performances and perfectly capable of using a humble heat sink (it’s the case with other manufacturers)!

To be fair, let’s add that this "intelligent" fan has the particularity of starting when in peak. The initiative reminds us of a similar MSI feature we’ll look at later on. However, Gigabyte doesn’t even use it to overclock the card, hence this fan doesn’t appear to have one ounce of relevance.
Fortunately, we were able to get closer to the passive GeForce 9600 GT of the manufacturer. Here’s a much more interesting model but with a really massive heat sink with fin that cross over the back of the case.
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- CeBIT 2008: EFI BIOS At MSI
- CeBIT 2008: The Return Of Integrated Graphic Chips
- CeBIT 2008: Gigabyte - The Fan Becomes a Useless Argument
- CeBIT 2008: AGP isn't dead
- CeBIT 2008: Coolermaster is still there
- CeBIT 2008: Abit still ain't dead
