Monday, October 17th 2011
Thermalright Intros Revised Archon CPU Cooler
Air cooling specialist and pioneer of tower-type heatsinks, Thermalright, released a new revision of its Archon CPU cooler. Archon is a large tower-type heatsink that uses long aluminum fins. The heatsink measures 170 (H) x 155 (L) x 53 (W) mm. Such is the length of the fins that with this new revision, Thermalright decided to use a larger 150 mm fan, the Thermalright TY-150.
The TY-150 spins 500 to 1100 RPM, can be controlled using PWM, and has a noise output range of 19 to 23 dBA. The heatsink uses six 6 mm thick nickel plated copper heat pipes to convey heat evenly to the fin stack, in two rows of U-shaped pipes. The fins themselves are angled at spots to improve heat dissipation. The heat pipes converge at a mirrored copper base, but don't make direct contact with the CPU. The new Archon Rev. A is priced at €52.90.
Source:
TechConnect Magazine
The TY-150 spins 500 to 1100 RPM, can be controlled using PWM, and has a noise output range of 19 to 23 dBA. The heatsink uses six 6 mm thick nickel plated copper heat pipes to convey heat evenly to the fin stack, in two rows of U-shaped pipes. The fins themselves are angled at spots to improve heat dissipation. The heat pipes converge at a mirrored copper base, but don't make direct contact with the CPU. The new Archon Rev. A is priced at €52.90.
39 Comments on Thermalright Intros Revised Archon CPU Cooler
This one's also a nice cooler. It's one of the best, if not the best performing single tower HS. A good option for dual socket platforms because of it's size. One step ahead would be twin tower sinks like the NH-D14 or the Silver Arrow.
when the first tower coolers were released, thermalright was surprised that they outperformed their top-down coolers, especially inside a case. where the tower cooler orientation has a noticeable advantage.
so pioneer? far from it. Offered one of the best tower coolers out there? definitely.
It's true that TRUE was/is a great cooler and still holds against many today's HSFs, but it's no a pioneer in the meaning of this word. Also, HR-01 was released at that time and actually before TRU (not even TRUE at that time!), and still is a great low / zero air flow cooler.
The pioneering was however done by Scythe, to be fair.
www.silentpcreview.com/section11.html?from=105
Please do a little research before you write something ;) In my previous post I gave you a link to SPCR cooler section, look it up. Below is 9700 test.
www.silentpcreview.com/article727-page3.html
The original Ninja easily beat the 9700, see the link. Also, 9700 was launched later. Zalman had its part in queit/performance cooling, but their 8-shaped cooler were crap performancewise.
Also, I can't say for you location but where I live Scythe's are/were way more popular.
Dimension: L160mm x H140mm x W26.5mm
Weight: 140g
Fan speed: 900~1300RPM (PWM controlled)
Fan noise: 19~21dBA
Airflow: 56~73CFM
Connector: 4 Pin (PWM Fan connector)
ty-150:
Dimension: L160mm x H140mm x W26.5mm
Weight: 160g
Fan speed: 500~1100RPM (PWM controlled)
Fan noise: 19~23dBA
Airflow: 38~84CFM
Connector: 4 Pin (PWM Fan connector)
been testing heatsinks since GlobalWin FOP38 on Athlon T-bird Socket 462 (60mm 4000rpm screamer); before introduction of copper heatsinks and heat pipes. Since then I've tested and reviewed more than 150 heatsinks ( www.madshrimps.be/articles/article/389/All-Heatsink-Tests-Done-By-Madshrimps-In-One-Place#axzz1b1zJitfh );
Thermalright pioneered the heatpipe with their SP-94; that heatsink was way better than the competition. Tower coolers however, credit goes to Coolermaster for design; Scythe for making them large enough for use with 120mm fans. Nice... EOD.
I do care about noise but for this comparison let's leave it out and simply focus on raw thermals. And still Zalman loses, as proven by the link. If I wanted to give Ninja more edge I'd slap another fan on it, and make it a faster one. But there's no need.
So please, really, DO you research before posting. I couldn't care less for your experience - you're obviously not SPCR and can't claim a pennyworth of their expertise. To remain out of the equation I won't tell you what HSF I have/had. I'll simply rely on a reputable site to pass judgment. If you don't agree with their results you're welcome to start your own testing site and work hard for a couple of years to become respected among geeks and pass your verdicts then.
I certainly didn't think " who came up with this first" when I installed my heatsinks.
+ 1 to silver arrow being the better choice though.
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I'm an pc enthusiast and like silence : [
I'm enthusiastic about silence performance computing in fact.
You have to bare in mind John Doe that a pc enthusiast doesn't necessarily mean ONLY POWER WILL DO!
There's lots of different types.