Wednesday, August 5th 2009

Tuniq Announces Tower 120 Extreme CPU Cooler

Tuniq today announced its newest CPU cooler, the Tower 120 Extreme. With this release Tuniq introduced what it calls a radical design change, that increases heat dissipation surface area, and brings about turbulence that helps cooling. To do so, each aluminum fin has "wave-design" edges on two sides. Every neighbouring fin has an alternating wave-pattern, that helps provide turbulence. A 120 mm, PWM-controlled, LED-lit fan is nested inside the fin block, that circulates air. Five nickel-plated copper heatpipes convey heat to the fins, which make direct contact to the CPU at the block.

The cooler measures 131(L) x 112.31(W) x 150.7(H), and weighs in at 775 g without the fan (around 850 g with it). The fan spins at speeds between 1000~2000 rpm, pushing up to 90.65 CFM of air, with a maximum noise output of 20 dBA. Out of the five heatpipes, three are 8 mm in thickness, and two 6 mm ones. The package includes a 1g tube of Tuniq's recently announced TX-3 thermal compound. In Tuniq's own tests, the Tower 120 Extreme emerged at least 10% more efficient at cooling than its predecessor, the Tower 120. It is compatible with most current CPU sockets, including LGA-1366, LGA-775, and AM3/AM2+/AM2. Expect it to be priced close to that of the Tower 120 when it hits stores soon.
Add your own comment

28 Comments on Tuniq Announces Tower 120 Extreme CPU Cooler

#1
Mistral
Nice looking cooler, with five direct contact pipes and all.
However, on the 90.65 CFM @ 20 dBA I call shenanigans.
Posted on Reply
#2
Disparia
There's a Coolermaster fan with those specs, though I don't know if it can achieve such high cfm at low db either. Sweet if they can!
Posted on Reply
#3
HossHuge
JizzlerThere's a Coolermaster fan with those specs, though I don't know if it can achieve such high cfm at low db either. Sweet if they can!
Ya, this one. I have 5 of them. They work great.
Posted on Reply
#4
MTnumb
this looks awsome. but i already have my ULTRA 120 EXTREME. if i didnt i would get this one it loks great.
Posted on Reply
#6
Athlon2K15
HyperVtX™
i have two of those fans,and they dont push 90 CFM i think it was only 70,if im not mistaken..
Posted on Reply
#8
DaveK
Screw the cooler, that fan has a nice spec :D
Posted on Reply
#9
Fx
MistralNice looking cooler, with five direct contact pipes and all.
However, on the 90.65 CFM @ 20 dBA I call shenanigans.
I find that hard to beleive too. I hope I am wrong cause that is very impressive if true
Posted on Reply
#10
Gjohnst4
I think I will buy one. My zerotherm btf wont let me get a stable 3.7 on my PII 720.
Posted on Reply
#11
Unregistered
The five heatpipes are only going to touch the whole chip on a I7 though,one of the pipes on a 4 pipe xiggy barely touch as it is.Thats a heck of a big contact area for 5 pipes.
#12
AsRock
TPU addict
AthlonX2i have two of those fans,and they dont push 90 CFM i think it was only 70,if im not mistaken..
Yeah 90CFM gotta call that BS or just there own rating. IF it was 120x120x38 @ 2000RPM sure.

60-70CFM maybe.
Posted on Reply
#13
OnBoard
MistralNice looking cooler, with five direct contact pipes and all.
However, on the 90.65 CFM @ 20 dBA I call shenanigans.
FxI find that hard to beleive too. I hope I am wrong cause that is very impressive if true
I think it's a mistake and it should be 90.65 m3/h = about 53 CFM. (or they lie dBa/CFM number)
Posted on Reply
#16
domy85
Very nice indeed. I want to see some temps on a core I7. Can I also use it as a cheese grater :confused:



:toast:
Posted on Reply
#17
t77snapshot
domy85Can I also use it as a cheese grater :confused:
:laugh: Yeah! it will keep your cheese nice and frosty;)

---------
I love the new look of this cooler and 5 HDT's :rockout: is a very nice touch. I think I might pick one of these up.
Posted on Reply
#18
Unregistered
Will all them pipes actually touch the chip on a 775 though?
#19
Zubasa
tiggerWill all them pipes actually touch the chip on a 775 though?
I say a 775 chip barely touches 3 or something:roll:
Posted on Reply
#20
HellasVagabond
The Tower 120 Extreme was announced a long time ago and has been on their website for a month. The only real question is when it will be available since it still aint.
Posted on Reply
#21
a_ump
i think the reason for using 2 6mm pipes instead of strait 8mm is so that it perfectly fits a 775 and am2/+/3 IHS, click the pick and you see it goes 8|6|8|6|8. so with the other 2, it probly gets perfect coverage for the i7, with the 2 6mm on the inside it perfectly covers an LGA 775. just my guess htough :P
Posted on Reply
#22
Kantastic
a_umpi think the reason for using 2 6mm pipes instead of strait 8mm is so that it perfectly fits a 775 and am2/+/3 IHS, click the pick and you see it goes 8|6|8|6|8. so with the other 2, it probly gets perfect coverage for the i7, with the 2 6mm on the inside it perfectly covers an LGA 775. just my guess htough :P
If what you're saying is true this would be one heck of a heatsink, and Tuniq deserves some serious props for their thoughtfulness.
Posted on Reply
#23
AddSub
That is a massive HDT heatsink they got there.
The five heatpipes are only going to touch the whole chip on a I7 though,one of the pipes on a 4 pipe xiggy barely touch as it is.Thats a heck of a big contact area for 5 pipes.
A photo for reference purposes:


i7 CPU vs. C2Q CPU vs. US quarter dollar coin
Posted on Reply
#24
sneekypeet
not-so supermod
tiggerWill all them pipes actually touch the chip on a 775 though?
I think it will cover the center 3 and half of the outer two, like most other 5 pipe coolers, even with the off set diameters. More for I7's in my opinion.
Posted on Reply
Add your own comment
Nov 29th, 2024 08:44 EST change timezone

New Forum Posts

Popular Reviews

Controversial News Posts