Scythe Ninja Plus takes on Three TEC Heavyweights

Performance Increase From Overclocking

All three TEC coolers reached the same maximum stable clock speed of 4.33 GHz, so all three are represented together. Meanwhile, the Scythe Ninja Plus Revision B's maximum overclock of 4.12 GHz is represented as "Big Air" in the charts below.

Overclocking is all about performance gains, and the Extreme Edition 955 puts up some embarrassing benchmark scores compared to modern Intel Core Architecture processors. Thus, the performance differences are shown below, rather than individual test scores.

A 25% overclock for a scorching Pentium Extreme Edition 955 resulted in an astounding 26% increase in average system performance, using any of the three TEC-equipped CPU air coolers. Editor Darren Polkowski has noted in the past that the 8800GTX requires a powerful CPU, and the largest performance gains were seen in average game frame rates.

The Scythe Ninja Plus Revision B was no slouch either, considering the processor chosen. Though it only allowed a 19% overclock on this particular CPU, the EE955 was specifically chosen for its ability to stress coolers to their maximum capabilities. The Ninja Plus Revision B is certainly more than adequate for cooling a more energy-efficient CPU, and every Core 2 processor is more efficient than the Presler-core EE955.

Thomas Soderstrom
Thomas Soderstrom is a Senior Staff Editor at Tom's Hardware US. He tests and reviews cases, cooling, memory and motherboards.
  • Ninja Plus is Junk. My origin cooler with dual 120mm fans, one front and one back create perfect air flow, temperature from 39C to 50C max. After installed Ninja Plus along dual fans remain place, temperature only 1C lower to as high as 51C. Blow my brain is, peoplee hype up gimmick without even test the dual 120mm fans in the box 1st then jump into conclusion Ninja excellency. Wasted my $ and time due to the unproven text result with flaws. I saying this because I even tested in socket 478 old pc, same thing with dual fans flow in case. In conclusion Ninja is ajavascript:%20void(0); piece of junk other than try sell hype..
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