Bitspower Touchaqua Summit MS OLED Review 7

Bitspower Touchaqua Summit MS OLED Review

Value & Conclusion »

Performance Summary

With CPU waterblocks, both thermal performance and liquid-flow restriction are important metrics. Unlike radiators where component liquid-flow restriction is not as big a factor in the loop's overall flow rate, CPU block choice will impact average flow rate a lot and thus can not be ignored. In order to quantify relative performance for a CPU block thus, a normalized percentage-based data set was created, with 70% weighting given to thermal performance and 30% weighting given to liquid-flow restriction. The data set created was thus plotted with the subject of this review at 100%.


Let's clarify here that the metric for a quantitative performance summary is based on my own thoughts as there is no universally accepted standard. As it stands, the lower than average flow restriction and relatively worse thermal performance combined lead to a fairly decent standing here, with the former outweighing the smaller spread with the latter.

Performance per Dollar

Prices are taken from Performance PCs in the USA when available, with all numbers reported in USD. For products not available there, the most obvious retail source is chosen, such as a manufacturer's web shop. For products no longer available, the last available reasonable price point is considered.


We must note right away that aesthetics and build quality do not necessarily translate directly here, especially with intricate metal tops, RGB lighting, and integrated displays that add to the cost but are not quantifiable as a performance metric. Despite all this, the Bitspower Touchaqua Summit MS OLED fares worse than all but the other two Bitspower blocks. This shows that the block is priced higher than most of the rest, but big parts of the price are of course the integrated temperature sensing and OLED display. I am getting more skeptical than ever before about the relevance of this graph in an age where CPU blocks come with so many non-quantifiable features, so please let me know if you think this graph is still useful or not.
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Dec 23rd, 2024 06:40 EST change timezone

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