Tuesday, February 3rd 2009

Cooler Master V10 Hybrid TEC Cooler Tested

Cooler Master has gone full cylinders with innovation for the design of the V10 Hybrid TEC, a variant of the V10 cooler that employs a 70W TEC (Thermo-electric couple) element to indirectly cool the processor. The principle on which it works is fairly simple: A set of heatpipes propagate through the CPU contact block. The same heatpipes make contact with the cold-plate of the TEC. The hot-plate of the TEC is cooled by a dedicated aluminum fin array which is subjected to air flow. The heatpipes that cool the CPU propagate into two additional, independent aluminum fin arrays. All this, neatly packed into the shroud. The TEC part of the cooler has its own Molex power input, and is regulated by a temperature control module. The two fans in place to cool the fins use standard 3~4 pin fan connections. TweakTown put this cooler to test against most common high-end air coolers.

In theory, this is a good concept, though the indirect cooling the TEC element provides, isn't going to send temperatures down to sub-zero levels. Instead, the estimates on its spec. sheet shows it to maintain temperatures between 25 and 70 degrees Celsius. The cooler however, is rated for CPUs with TDPs of up to 200W (a figure achieved during overclocking). The findings of the review, however, show the cooler to be not much of an improvement over most high-end air coolers. The review can be read here.
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60 Comments on Cooler Master V10 Hybrid TEC Cooler Tested

#51
DrPepper
The Doctor is in the house
TurdFergasunwow what stupidity from the majority of posters, this is one of the first mainstream implimentations of peltier technology. so if the majority of your small minds had their run on things, we'd never see SSD tech get to where it is today, because on first mainstream attempt they were much, much slower than 7200rpm drives. or ddr would never have gotten to ddr2 or ddr3, when they were first released the speed improvements were negligible and the prices were far higher than their predecessors. try to see past your own nose once n awhile maybe?
Doesn't change the fact that it isn't as good as other coolers that are half the price.
Posted on Reply
#52
Haytch
If the V8, V10 and V12 were released over a year ago, then i would have been impressed. This dragging news of these 3 coolers being released is really bad.

When i first heard of these coolers i paid special interest towards the V12 and am still anxiously awaiting their arrival down under. The V8 finally hit the shelf, and i guess this marks the V10 hitting the shelf, now its just a matter of the V12 heading my way.

The V8 has been priced at what i expected to pay for the V12.
Posted on Reply
#53
DRDNA
TurdFergasunwow what stupidity from the majority of posters, this is one of the first mainstream implimentations of peltier technology. so if the majority of your small minds had their run on things, we'd never see SSD tech get to where it is today, because on first mainstream attempt they were much, much slower than 7200rpm drives. or ddr would never have gotten to ddr2 or ddr3, when they were first released the speed improvements were negligible and the prices were far higher than their predecessors. try to see past your own nose once n awhile maybe?
They did this about two years or more ago .....And I have one ...it worked better than than this thing seems too but also did not have the ram fins which are on the cold side....It was a fun cooler ....I did experaments with like stacking peltiers to see the affects.. ( I had it on a FX57 clocked and it did very well as good as any average water rig)....but yup sooner or later they will get it right, it probably take water to do it though.....some pics of it from my cell...
Posted on Reply
#54
Wile E
Power User
TurdFergasunwow what stupidity from the majority of posters, this is one of the first mainstream implimentations of peltier technology. so if the majority of your small minds had their run on things, we'd never see SSD tech get to where it is today, because on first mainstream attempt they were much, much slower than 7200rpm drives. or ddr would never have gotten to ddr2 or ddr3, when they were first released the speed improvements were negligible and the prices were far higher than their predecessors. try to see past your own nose once n awhile maybe?
Except that both Monsoon and Ultra products already marketed peltier air coolers years ago.
Posted on Reply
#56
cdawall
where the hell are my stars
the ultra is only a 50w tec
Posted on Reply
#57
Wile E
Power User
cdawallthe ultra is only a 50w tec
No, I'm pretty sure it's an 80w TEC. They just keep it throttled back. I seem to remember somebody doing a test on it by bypassing the controller module.
Posted on Reply
#58
cdawall
where the hell are my stars
Wile ENo, I'm pretty sure it's an 80w TEC. They just keep it throttled back. I seem to remember somebody doing a test on it by bypassing the controller module.
they listed the wattage on there site as a 50w if its really an 80w thats somewhat nicer.
Posted on Reply
#59
Unregistered
Atleast if zombies pull off an uprising you can tie it to a bit of string and use it as a flail :laugh:
#60
Wile E
Power User
cdawallthey listed the wattage on there site as a 50w if its really an 80w thats somewhat nicer.
Most 12v 40mm TEC are 80W. But I'm not 100% sure if it was the Ultra that the test was performed on.
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