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Antec Kühler Vs. Corsair Hydro: Sealed Liquid CPU Coolers Compared

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  • Cooling
  • Corsair
  • CPUs
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December 5, 2011 3:00:03 AM

Offering a taste of liquid-cooled performance without the maintenance hassle, sealed-liquid systems are the logical choice for many high-end builds. We compare four options to an air-cooled standard to see if any of them stand out above the others.

Antec Kühler Vs. Corsair Hydro: Sealed Liquid CPU Coolers Compared : Read more

More about : antec kuehler corsair hydro sealed liquid cpu coolers compared

December 5, 2011 3:10:13 AM

You would have a hard time convincing me that my Noctua NH-U12P SE2 was anything but quiet and effective, but I know that many prefer sealed water solutions. My opinion is that for 1155 SB processors, even overclocked ones, you're better off with a high end air cooler.
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December 5, 2011 3:18:50 AM

comptonYou would have a hard time convincing me that my Noctua NH-U12P SE2 was anything but quiet and effective, but I know that many prefer sealed water solutions. My opinion is that for 1155 SB processors, even overclocked ones, you're better off with a high end air cooler.


I completely agree. Pretty much the only reason to go with these sealed water coolers is to say that you water cooled your PC.
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December 5, 2011 3:38:30 AM

Yes for SB processors, air is fine because they don't really get that hot. Now SBE, on the other hand, gets extremely hot and you need the best cooling you can get.
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December 5, 2011 3:40:38 AM

soccerdocksI completely agree. Pretty much the only reason to go with these sealed water coolers is to say that you water cooled your PC.


I agree 100%. And I do, in fact have an H70. And when I'm at work describing the epic beast of computers I build, and I show off some pics of mine; I always point to the H70 and go "Theres the radiator for the water cooler" /gasp!
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December 5, 2011 3:45:45 AM

I still have my H50 so reading this bummed me out a little. Haha.
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December 5, 2011 3:49:15 AM

High end air is probably better than most sealed liquid coolers except for the H100. My H50 is alright but not nearly as good as I thought it was going to be when I first got it. Next build im definitely gonna go full custom water cooling though :D 
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December 5, 2011 4:10:57 AM

These coolers are terrible cooling/value, it's sad that consumers see "Water-cooling" (IMO this is "fake" water cooling in that it's all in a closed loop) and they think it'll cool the best. However the temps speak for itself, a $50 air cooler can practically, if not beat, a $80 closed-loop WC solution with the dBA being similar. Sad.
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December 5, 2011 4:17:55 AM

did anyone else notice that the author as well as manufacturer's of these pseudo WC loops rerfer to the cpu contact plate as a cold plate...last time i checked a cold plate is what is used in a Peltier unit...:/
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December 5, 2011 4:19:16 AM

cmcghee358I agree 100%. And I do, in fact have an H70. And when I'm at work describing the epic beast of computers I build, and I show off some pics of mine; I always point to the H70 and go "Theres the radiator for the water cooler" /gasp!


I think that's a perfectly good reason to buy any product. I like that I have a choice. But Noctua's tower coolers look pretty sexy too.
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December 5, 2011 4:20:27 AM

Was thinking about getting the 620 for a future SB/IB build, but now Im not so sure. Anyway, thanks for the reviews!
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December 5, 2011 4:46:04 AM

Oh god - My heart jumped when I saw this article pop-up on Tom's. I just bought my first build since 2005 and decided to go I7-3930K (expected arrival of all parts to be later today). With it, since intel did not strap a cooler to the proc this time around, and the proc was expected to be pretty hot, I went for the H80 rather than Intel's thinking that company had a better understanding of us and cooling expectations. Needless to say, after reading this article, I can sleep the rest of tonight knowing I made a good choice and am looking to possibly OC my system when the parts arrive. I'm really looking forward to spitting out faster render times for my Autodesk Maya projects. Thanks Thomas!
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December 5, 2011 5:44:58 AM

I just put an H100 in a fresh build. Fan controller died within a couple days, I have to RMA it. I also have another H100 NIB that im putting in another build in about a week. I hope I don't have to RMA both of them... The pump is still working so I plugged the fans directly into the mobo fan headers. Damn it's loud, but hey I can use my new computer at least until the replacement comes in. X)
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December 5, 2011 5:49:59 AM

Nice one crash.

Remember these are easy to install closed loop water colling setups too guys.

They are not half inch or bigger professional units designed to keep your massively overclocked sub-critical mass uber rig cool as ice and quiet too.

You need a decent pump, a large or two smaller radiators, a tank, and a lot more hose ... and some more time.

http://www.swiftech.com/


Corsair, Asetech, Antec, Thermaltake ... these are all low end units ... not enthusiast's water cooling gear like Swiftech.

Good value for money though ... I am not knocking them.
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December 5, 2011 6:00:17 AM

It would be nice to also see a custom water cooling kit that is specified on a water delta of 10C or less compared directly in these reviews. For an overclocked SB it would be either a thick 120.2 or a slim 120.3 radiator combined with some Gentle Typhoon fans. For blocks a HK 3, llang ddc 3 pump with XSPC head and 1/2" piping throughout. Sure it costs a lot more but it also cools a lot better than these prebuilt systems.
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December 5, 2011 7:19:42 AM

Super good write up. I've been on the fence for awhile now when it comes to my next cooling solution. I'll have to take another look at these when it comes time to build my next system.
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December 5, 2011 7:58:51 AM

Excellent article!
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December 5, 2011 8:05:31 AM


Once again you do a comparison against an inferior air cooler, so your conclusion does not hold much weight with me.

Why do you not include the Noctua NH-D14 or a Thermalright Silver Arrow, both which cost about the same as your WC loops (or a bit less) yet are delivering better performance (and noise levels) with the Antec H100 at max speed as the exception. The H100 is comparable to the air coolers.
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December 5, 2011 8:07:47 AM

comptonI think that's a perfectly good reason to buy any product. I like that I have a choice. But Noctua's tower coolers look pretty sexy too.


Oh I'd rather have a Noctua NH-D14 with a 3rd NH-12 fan, but I traded an old crappy PSU for this H70 brand new. So I takes what I can gets!
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December 5, 2011 8:21:29 AM

LothDKOnce again you do a comparison against an inferior air cooler...
Conspiracy theories aside, the air cooler was picked because it was 120mm and had a similar-sized radiator. After all, it IS one of the top coolers its size.

Furthermore you say "Once again..." even though the air cooler won the last time this editor wrote this type of comparison. Look it up, "Small water versus Big Air", I'm sure Google can help.

cmcghee358Oh I'd rather have a Noctua NH-D14 with a 3rd NH-12 fan, but I traded an old crappy PSU for this H70 brand new. So I takes what I can gets!
I probably would too, but Intel would prefer you don't. It's going sealed liquid in its LGA 2011 configurations to reduce weight on the board. It even designed BTX with CPU cooler support built in (for the same reason), though builders rejected BTX. Heck, even AMD has pushed small liquid on reviewers in its AM3+ test kit, just take a look at the lead photo!
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December 5, 2011 8:33:03 AM

Crashman said:
Conspiracy theories aside, the air cooler was picked because it was 120mm and had a similar-sized radiator. After all, it IS one of the top coolers its size.

Furthermore you say "Once again..." even though the air cooler won the last time this editor wrote this type of comparison. Look it up, "Small water versus Big Air", I'm sure Google can help.


I read your last article as well, like I do most articles on the site.

The problem I have with this article is your intro where you mention noise and cooling performance, yet you chose an air cooler that is cheaper than the WC loops you are testing.
Had you chosen a comparable air cooler price wise (the Ncotua NH-D14 or Thermalright Silver Arrow), all of the WC loops would have performed worse than the air cooler, the H100 would have been the exception, but it would have to run at max speed, thus negating the noise level performance.
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December 5, 2011 8:42:35 AM

LothDKI read your last article as well, like I do most articles on the site.The problem I have with this article is your intro where you mention noise and cooling performance, yet you chose an air cooler that is cheaper than the WC loops you are testing.Had you chosen a comparable air cooler price wise (the Ncotua NH-D14 or Thermalright Silver Arrow), all of the WC loops would have performed worse than the air cooler, the H100 would have been the exception, but it would have to run at max speed, thus negating the noise level performance.
In what way are those dual-radiator coolers comparable to the 620 or H80? Price? If you're going by price use the chart on the last page.

I'll take back part of what I said to someone else, I'd probably use a BIG air cooler personally but NOT THAT big. I've taken the "spring" out of LGA pins before using a heavy cooler.

The article was supposed to have been set up like the previous articles, with a single "standard fan" as the "equalizer", but that plan was cancelled when the H100 arrived with a 2-fan requirement. That also explains why the original plan dictated a single-fan 120mm air cooler as the competitor, though I'm fairly certain all this information is in the article (sorry if it's spread out in bits and pieces).
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December 5, 2011 9:22:20 AM

Crashman said:
In what way are those dual-radiator coolers comparable to the 620 or H80? Price? If you're going by price use the chart on the last page.

Quote from that price list on the last page
Quote:
Thus, a value chart like the one above doesn't really matter to the high-end buyers willing to spend big bucks on hardware, since it’s so heavily skewed by price. A look at the previous page’s cooling and acoustic efficiency charts give us the most useful information. And clearly, power users who simply want the best low-maintenance solution will take the closed-loop liquid route.

And this is exactly where the problem arise with the inferior air cooler you chose.
Had you chosen to use a comparable (price wise) cooler, you would have come to a different conclusion, namely that the air cooler would be the best price/performance/noise level choice.
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December 5, 2011 9:50:29 AM

I bought an H100 and i'm happy with it, doing a moderate overclock, good temperatures and its quiet. Air sure can cool just as well but usually at the cost of the noise and the finer fin air coolers clogs up to easily even with a normal case dust filter compared to the normal radiator. Done several "real" water cooling setups (cpu, gpu, hdd, northbridge+southbridge & mem) in the past and its not worth the hassle to get that extra mile imo.

To me the H100 is a good purchase, run on auto if you want quiet or force it higher if you want to overclock a tad more. You get several choices from the same package.
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December 5, 2011 12:07:36 PM

It seems like another round of Corsair novelty with these coolers.

Why put liquid anywhere near your system when an air cooling solution is just as effective?

Additionally, with these Hxx coolers, they are worth a darn if you don't have two fans blowing in conjunction with the radiator. As a result, there's not even the advantage of a reduction in noise.
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December 5, 2011 12:08:50 PM

please replace 'are worth a darn...' with 'aren't worth a darn...'
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December 5, 2011 12:17:30 PM

hmm, great coolers i think H100 will keep the cpu freeze.
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December 5, 2011 12:41:49 PM

It always makes me laugh when so many people look at these and say 'watercooling' or 'watercooling loop' when it really doesn't fit into that category at all.

I think the results show what we've been saying for a few years now- LCS coolers like these are pretty much novelty when it comes to actual performance. Wake me up when someone at Tom's wants to do an actual watercooling loop with CPU and 2-3 SLI card performance comparisons. Until then, I'll let people go about their business thinking they have something to brag about, when they really don't/
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December 5, 2011 12:42:40 PM

I'm curious how Cooler Master's cooling products can keep up. I hope I'll see some soon.
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December 5, 2011 12:44:52 PM

gti88Yeah, and even $40 HR-02 Macho is more preferable than Corsair H80:http://www.xbitlabs.com/picture/?s [...] gr_big.png

That's what I'm talking about. Corsair makes good products outside of their coolers which are over-priced novelty items. This gen is no different than the last gen of their LCLCs.
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December 5, 2011 12:59:11 PM

First: a criticism of your methodology. In comparing the cooling you only give CPU temperatures, and fail to give any acount of the ambient temperatures in the case. Certainly, CPU temps are the primary target, however, part of the problem with Air/Heatsinks is that they exhaust all of their waste heat into the case, thereby increasing the temperatures for all other components. Part of this criticism also applies to the Corsair models which are supposed to draw air into the case. If the fan configuration is per OEM specs, they too are increasing ambient case temperatures.

Second: you are comparing factory builds, and not modded configurations. While this makes for a fair approach, it ignores the fact that most builders are modders. If, for example, I can use a second fan on the H620 in a push pull configuration and, can plug the fan/pump controller into a mobo header from which I can regulate speed (ehich is what I actually do) then your evaluation is not exactly fair. Further, as you can mod out all of these units with better fans, the comparisons are even more questionable.

Despite the above critique, I think that this article is a very good starting point, and should lead to a Part 2: evaluating these coolers in modded configurations.
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December 5, 2011 2:13:15 PM

I dunno, was thinking of getting the h100, as I love corsairs products, but the reviews on newegg aren't all that great, lot of reviews of them dying. I think the best option would be custom building your own cooling system.
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December 5, 2011 2:19:08 PM

Rasa RS240 kit is significantly better for almost the same price (less than $10+). However, too many people are afraid of 'water inside their case' to convince them it isn't that scary or difficult.

This is often a discussion in the watercooling forums- if you are interested, drop by and read through the forum threads and sticky.

Tom's Hardware Watercooling forum
Tom's Hardware Watercooling Sticky
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December 5, 2011 2:31:15 PM

I don't understand the conclusion, honestly. So... basically, we got some closed loop "water coolers" running against a mediocre air cooler... and both noise levels, and temps aren't that much better. Yet, cost is considerably higher, and there's more things that can break.

If you gave me a huge pile of cash, ruling cost out as a deciding factor.. and these were my only cooler choices... I'd choose the EVGA cooler. I seriously would.
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December 5, 2011 2:49:09 PM

I have been using the H80 for months now and love it.
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December 5, 2011 3:45:05 PM

Very nice review after i purchase H100.
However price for H80 just pay little more for H100 is better i guess.
What so ever Corsair rock~~
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Anonymous
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December 5, 2011 3:59:43 PM

I just purchased a H100 and the radiator noise (excluding the two fans that come with the H100) is over-the-top. The sound is similar to a refrigerator hum that is louder than any of my case/video card fans on idle. After reading complaints about the H100 on Corsair's forums there may be a QA issue. I've contacted Corsair customer service and they wanted me to pay shipping on a brand-new product that was defective out of the box. I had to call them before they would relent on the shipping. Now waiting for the replacement to arrive.

It's too bad because I have it installed in a Corsair 500 case which I love. The H100 fits the case perfectly.
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December 5, 2011 4:42:47 PM

cmcghee358I agree 100%. And I do, in fact have an H70. And when I'm at work describing the epic beast of computers I build, and I show off some pics of mine; I always point to the H70 and go "Theres the radiator for the water cooler" /gasp!



Hahaha and the ladies swoon. :) 

I'm be interested in one of these coolers for my SFF Silverstone SUGO2 case, if only because it's proven impossible to find a good cooler that will fit my 1155 build. I've found a couple top-blowing coolers, was really hoping for a side-blowing solution but nothing is short enough, so it just pumps the air around the case.
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December 5, 2011 4:44:03 PM

tuffjuffHahaha and the ladies swoon. I'm be interested in one of these coolers for my SFF Silverstone SUGO2 case, if only because it's proven impossible to find a good cooler that will fit my 1155 build. I've found a couple top-blowing coolers, was really hoping for a side-blowing solution but nothing is short enough, so it just pumps the air around the case.



I forgot to mention the case only has 80mm fan placements, so it just isn't possible to stick a 120mm radiator in there.
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December 5, 2011 4:52:48 PM

"most builders don’t pick an enclosure based on its ability to accommodate a really big radiator."
I do think most performance oriented builder do though... Regular know little about oc people would probably don't care, but those who knows what they are doing should.
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December 5, 2011 5:30:30 PM

It would have been nice to have a little more information provided in the article. Its good to have straight out of the box performance compared, however I would have liked to see: liquid flow rates for the different pumps, as well as a comparison using an aftermarket thermal paste. I don’t know many enthusiasts who use manufactured supplied pastes unless they explicitly know what they are.

Also the bottom of the H100 and presumably the H80 seem extremely rough when compared to the Antec coolers, or at least that is how they appear in the photograph. I’m surprised that this was not noted on. By addressing the rough plate of the h80 its performance could be improved. However I do feel that if stock thermal paste was removed, and the fans of the coolers were switched to identical aftermarket fans a different picture would be painted.

This article does not address which cooler is right for the enthusiast market; it should have concluded which cooler has the best out of box appeal.

Article grade: C-
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December 5, 2011 5:35:31 PM

Pump flow is very questionable- even Corsair and Antec do not list this on their own sites. Pump flow is one of the most important selling points for every other pump used in watercooling. I've looked for flow stats on these before and have only seen 1-2 articles from people who have broken them down and done some independent testing...nothing from the actual manufacturers themselves. However, most of us full-watercooling guys don't consider these coolers as watercooling...they are simply an out-of-the-box gimmicky solution that basically 'competes' with good air cooling.
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December 5, 2011 6:11:22 PM

rubix_1011Pump flow is very questionable- even Corsair and Antec do not list this on their own sites. Pump flow is one of the most important selling points for every other pump used in watercooling. I've looked for flow stats on these before and have only seen 1-2 articles from people who have broken them down and done some independent testing...nothing from the actual manufacturers themselves. However, most of us full-watercooling guys don't consider these coolers as watercooling...they are simply an out-of-the-box gimmicky solution that basically 'competes' with good air cooling.


Flow the most important? Not really, head pressure is just as important, if not more so. If flow was the only consideration you'd see all the modders using aquarium pumps in there systems. However, that's not the case because these loops have a bit of restriction to them and those pumps wouldn't really cool anything because they offer virtually no pressure, just high flow rate.

And I have seen people actually use these systems over at XS as they have a use in certain situations.
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December 5, 2011 6:15:50 PM

The pump on the Corsair H60 is the best pump IMHO. I've used the H80 & the H100 in friends and family's SB builds. And still.. The best performance was obtained using an H60 in Push-pull with Low-noise quality fans in the case and radiator. 10-12F below room ambient at idle (17-2600K @ 4.4 Ghz OC). Just under 1 degree or just at ambient room temp under full load (LW 3D render) for 1 hr.

I feel as a mild OC'er.. the CLC's are still the way to go over air (bulk) for LOTS of reasons.
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December 5, 2011 6:16:55 PM

I have the Kuhler 620. In two cases I tried, Including Antec 1200 it the radiator obscures the top PCI-e 1x slot on my mobo, the one above the video card. Or if you move it higher then you can't install the fan below it. Also, the pump is audible and a lot more annoying than just a couple of large fans on a big air cooler. The pump also got louder after about 6 months. In the end this wasn't worth it. I wanted to use the top PCI-e slot for a SATA controller and the pump's sound was getting on my nerves. So I went back to Intel stock cooler and the temps aren't that much higher at all. I don't overclock so I guess it was a pointless purchase to begin with. Like someone pointed above: I thought it would be neat to have a water cooled CPU, but like I said the hassle isn't worth it.
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December 5, 2011 6:18:05 PM

I agree that head pressure takes precedence over flow rates; not arguing there. What has been noted by these teardowns is that there is very low flow and minimal head pressure (since the loop is minimal and predetermined by the tubing) there doesn't really need to be a lot of head, here. And since radiators are the least restrictive components, it comes down to flow rates in a simplistic 'loop' like this.

People everywhere use these in certain situations, but the WC'ing guys I know from XS and on OCnet really don't have much use for them outside of simplistic installation and use. We have an argument that discusses this in the watercooling forum if you'd like to join.
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December 5, 2011 6:19:48 PM

It's pretty silly to come in here and talk about "real" water-cooling and act as though anyone is claiming these systems are meant to compete with it. They aren't, and I don't think anyone will say they are. Even their staunchest proponents will say they are meant to compete with high-end air-cooling.

My next build will almost certainly use one of these (hopefully even better units will be out in the 2-4 years before I replace my Sandy Bridge system). Moving the fan/radiator off the processor and to the back or top of the case is simply logical: reduced weight on the motherboard, no large heatsink obstructing air-flow into the case, not exhausting the hot air into the case, better access to the motherboard components -- these are all reasons I'm looking to one of these rather than another giant copper heatsink on my CPU.

$30 one-way-or-the-other just isn't that big of a concern to me when I'm spending $1200+ on a build I plan to over clock. Also, as mentioned by another commenter, I wonder what the picture looks like when you replace the factory-applied thermal paste and "mod" one of these with higher-quality fans.
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December 5, 2011 6:28:26 PM

Oh and also, the biggest pain on any build I do is generally always installing the CPU cooler; trying to get the spring-loaded fasteners to engage in the backplate around the giant heatsink that would slice my hand open if my grip slipped (or the screwdriver damaging the mobo if it slipped) was by far the worst part of putting together my Sandy Bridge build, and I'd gladly pay the premium just for what looks like much easier/less scary installation.
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