- Joined
- Jul 21, 2018
- Messages
- 773 (0.33/day)
- Location
- Germany
System Name | FATTYDOVE-R-SPEC |
---|---|
Processor | Intel i9 10980XE |
Motherboard | EVGA X299 Dark |
Cooling | Water (1x 240mm, 1x 280mm, 1x 420mm + 2x Mo-Ra 360 external radiator) |
Memory | 64GB DDR4 |
Video Card(s) | RTX 2080 Super / RTX 3090 |
Storage | Crucial MX500 |
Display(s) | 24", 1440p, freesync, 144hz |
Case | Open Benchtable (OBT) |
Audio Device(s) | beyerdynamic MMX 300 |
Power Supply | EVGA Supernova T2 1600W |
Mouse | OG steelseries Sensei |
Keyboard | steelseries 6Gv2 |
Software | Windows 10 |
I found an offer for some fans and heatsinks for just 5€ total and got this bundle (excluding the V60, that was 10€ extra):
Now the V60 and that Enermax 120mm fan are kinda recent still, but the collector part in me was excited to see that all the things were still sealed in its original packaging and unused. And those Thermaltake-Orbs are the OG ones from around 2000 ish. The blorb was not a well performing cooler, the oorb was received better but still had some majors flaws in terms of mounting hardware. This product line later developed into full sized CPU and GPU coolers in this shape.
The two Papst fans are standard 80mm and fit the V60. Maybe I have a use for one of those in a very old PC-case too.
That Asus V60 is a great addition to my testbench system with an E8500 in it. Had been using the intel stock heatsink before and on my mild 3.7GHz OC it got up into the 60°C+ range. With the V60 it stays at 45°C with 1.28V, plenty of room for higher OC now.
The good part is that this thing fits my EVGA board really well, these 780i chipsets in combination with my super high-profile RAM leave little room for any oversized tower cooler. There is the RAM and opposite of that on the I/O side are the fins of the VRM heatsink that stand up quite a bit. Below the CPU is not much space due to the mainboard fan and chipset heatsink.
But the V60 is like it´s made for this board. It came with an adjustable fan, that has a little knob to control fan-speed, made by enermax. Not sure if that is the stock fan for this one.
Reviews mentioned this thing as the 'moped-engine' not just for the looks, but the noise too. It can rattle really bad, due to the fan being just dropped in from the top with that top-plate. Easy fix, just take a small patch of the soft side of velcro tape and stick it to the bottom of the top-plate = no more rattle.
Now the V60 and that Enermax 120mm fan are kinda recent still, but the collector part in me was excited to see that all the things were still sealed in its original packaging and unused. And those Thermaltake-Orbs are the OG ones from around 2000 ish. The blorb was not a well performing cooler, the oorb was received better but still had some majors flaws in terms of mounting hardware. This product line later developed into full sized CPU and GPU coolers in this shape.
The two Papst fans are standard 80mm and fit the V60. Maybe I have a use for one of those in a very old PC-case too.
That Asus V60 is a great addition to my testbench system with an E8500 in it. Had been using the intel stock heatsink before and on my mild 3.7GHz OC it got up into the 60°C+ range. With the V60 it stays at 45°C with 1.28V, plenty of room for higher OC now.
The good part is that this thing fits my EVGA board really well, these 780i chipsets in combination with my super high-profile RAM leave little room for any oversized tower cooler. There is the RAM and opposite of that on the I/O side are the fins of the VRM heatsink that stand up quite a bit. Below the CPU is not much space due to the mainboard fan and chipset heatsink.
But the V60 is like it´s made for this board. It came with an adjustable fan, that has a little knob to control fan-speed, made by enermax. Not sure if that is the stock fan for this one.
Reviews mentioned this thing as the 'moped-engine' not just for the looks, but the noise too. It can rattle really bad, due to the fan being just dropped in from the top with that top-plate. Easy fix, just take a small patch of the soft side of velcro tape and stick it to the bottom of the top-plate = no more rattle.