Sunday, February 4th 2007
Cooler Master Announces GeminII
As PC enthusiasts strive to push their computers further and further towards the limits, Cooler Master has announced quite a serious new heatsink. The GeminII is an enormous heatsink which will transfer heat produced by the CPU to two 120mm fans via aluminium fins and six copper heat pipes. The heatsink is compatible with X2, Core 2 Duo and Core 2 Extreme processors, provided that you have room in your case - if it's as impressive as it looks it should perform quite nicely. This heatsink (labelled as a CPU and board cooler by Cooler Master) should be released during March.
Source:
Engadget
23 Comments on Cooler Master Announces GeminII
Agree with -1, this is not good if it is SO BIG, you have to remove the exit fan. Exit fan is very important for the "chimney" effect to expell hot air out the top-back... allowing cool air to draw in the bottom.
However, depending on the position of the CPU socket on each mainboard, it may be possible to retain an exit fan.
Sorry but there has to be a limit and I think they just reached it.
GeminII seems to cool memory, power circuitry and chipset heatsink at the same time, so that's nice, but the hot air will still stay longer inside the case than wtih those backend blowing types. Not that it makes that big of a difference, but don't see this beating Scythe Infinity inside case. Propably will win in a test where motherboard is on table though.
edit: this "- Flexible bracket design provides interference-free installation" seems nice
www.coolermaster.com/product_common_images/f4406bd6dd894fa36f07c1b30419d844.jpg
and some additional pictures
www.coolermaster.com/product_common_images/b0ae9dbb284eb51b1ab2e45a06742cb0.jpg
www.coolermaster.com/product_common_images/fc95b93c2cde64c934ff17b4b470a133.jpg
and more info
CPU Socket Socket AM2/754/939/940/LGA775
Dimensions 175x124.6x81.5mm
I think many people's idle temperatures is around 10C higher than room, and about 5C higher than case temp. There is NO WAY you are going to get 8C less WITH ANY air cooling system that uses air from inside the case. AT THE VERY BEST... you just get closer to the case temperature... But at load, the case temperature increases. So the best balance for cooling is a mix of CPU and case.
If installing this system requires removing an exit fan near the CPU, then the net net will be a hotter case and a hotter CPU.
A heatsink like that is not about cooling, it's all about showoff potential for people with windows on their cases, lights led fans etc, no doubt it'll cost a fortune.
Must admit though it does look good!