Wow so many pieces like the MK-13 (
http://www.prolimatech.com/en/products/detail.asp?id=159&subid=574#showtab ).
Love to try it just for the hell of it. Mine runs great with 2 fans blowing at the cooler and a side fan sucking air from the side of the card to a large side fan.
Main thing people will hate about this is space that it requires in some configs but some zip ties solve some of those issue's.
EDIT
http://www.alpenfoehn.de/index.php?...icle&id=174:peter&catid=61&Itemid=105&lang=en
Alpenföhn Peter (2:30)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BhT-IGudH7Y
Thanks for the two good links.
Good that your MK-13 works well for the 6970, which is more efficient and not a heat factory like the 480's I have to contend with.
I had an MK-13 on my first EVGA 480 when they were originally released. I was impressed by the Prolimatech's high-quality construction and the fan bracket (I still experiment with that bracket occasionally).
A bonus for me was that it could be used with the stock 480 heatplate.
But, Prolimatech later changed their compatibility rating to not compatible for the 480. I found that on my 480, it couldn't handle the heat ouput at anything beyond mild gaming, at which point the temps were higher than the stock cooler. I experimented with different fans and configurations, the best I could do was with two 110 cfm fans mounted under the cooler.
The Zalman VF3000F on my EVGA 480, and the oem version on my 480 AMP handle the heat output quite nicely in comparison, from gaming up to anything I can throw at them, including Furmark on extreme burn mode. Which I prefer to avoid using, but I had to see if the VF3000F's could handle it.
Back to the Alpenfohn, looking at the YouTube video, it looks like a damn good cooler. The construction quality appears to be equal to Prolimatech's, which are likely made at the same factory. The bracket looks to be longer than the MK-13's.
Was that a 580 it was installed on? I noticed it used that cards stock heatplate, so that would be a benefit for some.
Hope to see a review comparing it to the AXP, Zalman, and perhaps Thermalright's offerings.