It is not working 'efficiently'. Just air presence doesn't have to be good conduction happening. You are thinking of open spaces, I'm speaking of axial fans blowing on a fin array and missing spots. Not generating equal flow throughout the stack should be obvious to anyone otherwise we wouldn't have turbulent designs, every fin array would have identical stamped fins, do they?
This. Which is also sort of the point I was making earlier.
Negative pressure basically creates a 'pull' of air and the temperature determines what gets pulled out, while the dust bunnies get forced into the intake airflow before any other holes that aren't filtered. This is also why you want a simple, fixed and well optimized airflow direction in the case. Yes, you can exhaust heat anywhere, but the best way to do it, is to make sure it all gets dragged into that flow from front to back of the machine.
To the coffee example. You can blow for ages on coffee and still find it hot. But you can also have it standing there for 10 minutes and find it cooler, because the heat was removed from all ends of the cup instead of just the top surface you blew on, if it was for instance just standing in front of an open, drafty door.
And still somehow Choten costs the same as CM 212 EVO. Well at least in Europe. The only design difference I see is that you need longer heatpipes and to bend them more. Other than that, I don't see the difficulty. And maybe it's just me, but when buying Choten, space around socket wasn't a consideration to me. As long as you don't have some unusual VRM heatsinks, it should fit. It's not like Godhand or Susanoo, which make top PCIe slots useless
It's not really an irrational preference. I have read motherboard manuals in CPU installation sections and often they mention that you need downdraft cooler for motherboard cooling, unless you don't mind your board not working as long. And very good OCN guide claims that 71% of all motherboard failures are from overheating VRMs. That's quite significant.
1. Motherboard manuals take the safest approach, not the most performant one or efficient one. For the same reason, OEMs use blower GPUs. I'm sure you can agree that in any regular ATX case, a blower is really not the optimal choice. The same goes for topflow and bundled CPU coolers. They serve a purpose, yes. But it is not efficient cooling, its playing it safe when all else fails. You have to imagine that a manufacturer of a CPU will always opt to get the majority of temp variables under its own control. A topflow cooler is the better way of doing so, you just worry about your area around your CPU socket, fuck the rest and overall quality of life, such as the noise level or the required case fanspeeds to keep things tip top outside of the CPU socket.
2. Yeah... 71% of mobo failures. How many mobo's fail?
The miracles of stats, eh. And then... a test performed on predominantly a subset of users doing stuff at their own risk (OCing) in a niche of the market. VRM is indeed something you want to cool, but mobo's do provide (as per above example, same thing applies in terms of control - control also over your flow of RMAs
) cooling for the VRM - heat sinks.
Now, you also have a niche of users (and cases
) here that is very keen on trying stuff that is pretty damn stupid. Note my sig. Bad case cooling and wild ideas about airflow can easily be added there.
I'm afraid that I have to concede that after 20 odd years of PC enthusiasm I'm pretty much cured of all bullshit methods people invent to get more performance or do things better than the 'norm' most people consider sane. You're looking at humongous stacks of diminishing returns there, in other words, tons of effort for extremely minor advantages, that often carry disadvantages along with them. I know, boring af, but it is what it is. Most stuff has been invented and reinvented a few dozen times over, and simplicity tends to win the day.