Titan Dragonfly 4 Review 10

Titan Dragonfly 4 Review

Installation »

A Closer Look


A slim single tower out of two small 50 fin stacks, the Titan Dragonfly 4 CPU cooler's heatpipes are evenly spaced throughout both stacks, which transfers heat across its aluminum fins equally. This is one cooler that certainly manages to stand out due to its unique slim design and choice fan.


With a weight of 480 g, the Dragonfly 4 is a light-weight cooler. Users then won't be caught breathing a sigh of relief in hopes that it will stay in place right after it has been mounted. How this design holds up when placed under heavy load will be interesting to see.


The top plate of the heatsink has clearly visible Titan and Dragonfly logos. As can be seen, the heatpipes are evenly spaced apart and arranged in a single row. That single row has the heatpipes crossing over each other, with two bending in to make it all possible.


The base consists of small pieces of aluminum in-between four heatpipes. With the aluminum portion of the base very solid, only tiny gaps are visible on the actual base itself, where the heatsink meets the processor due to the heatpipes making direct contact with it.


The Titan Extreme fan offers a PWM range of 150-1500 RPM and is 120 mm x 120 mm x 15 mm large. It is, to say the least, a unique fan since its RPM limit is the lowest I have seen so far. Its model number is TFD-12015H12ZP, and it is rated at 0.20A.
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Nov 18th, 2024 17:19 EST change timezone

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