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Prolimatech Intros MK-26 Black Series GPU Heatsink
Prolimatech introduced the Black Series variant of its MK-26 GPU heatsink that went on sale last September. The variant features matte black anodized aluminum fins, while retaining the chrome finished nickel-plated copper heat pipes that produce a nice contrast. Designed to handle thermal loads as high as 320W, the MK-26 is a dual aluminum fin-stack heatsink, which uses six heat pipes to convey heat from a nickel-plated copper block. A pair of 140 mm fans (not included) can be attached to the heatsink. individual heatsinks for memory and VRM components are included; as are thermal pads and a tube of TIM. Prolimatech updated the GPU compatibility list of the MK-26 to include the recently launched GeForce GTX TITAN. The company did not release pricing or availability details.
http://www.techpowerup.com/img/13-02-28/152a_thm.jpg http://www.techpowerup.com/img/13-02-28/152b_thm.jpg http://www.techpowerup.com/img/13-02-28/152c_thm.jpg http://www.techpowerup.com/img/13-02-28/152d_thm.jpg http://www.techpowerup.com/img/13-02-28/152e_thm.jpg |
Looks massive, but cool...
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I am actually more interested in the fans. I remember when they had the announcement on tpu but had not specs beyond 140mm. I wonder how they would be on a slim lower fpi rad.
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It looks like its gonna cover 4 slots and it's gonna be heavy with 2 fans installed. It would be good for single card users. :)
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After seeing the wonders arctic cooling options do I'm not very confident in tightly packed fin designs. I think it's just going to impede the airflow too much and you're going to get bad vrm temps. Certainly looks nice enough to go on a Titan though.
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The aftermarket GPU cooling market should die already. When today for a reference price you get amazing coolers such as Windforce, Twinfrozr, DirectCUII and such.
Aftermarket coolers for GPUs belong to the era where most of GPUs came with the reference design and advanced cooled GPUs were too expensive. No longer. |
^+1
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Just because YOU don't need aftermarket coolers, doesn't mean everyone else doesn't. |
that thing looks cool...
needs some kind of massive equally cool shroud tho... |
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So, you should pay the same money for a reference designed card. Waste more money on an after marker triple slot cooler, void your warranty, risk damaging the card and enjoy the same experience. Get over it, GPU aftermarket coolers are a dead horse. Whether you like it or not. Quote:
BTW thanks for letting me prove my point. |
If that doesn't warp your card than I don't know what would.
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Like to try one of these with the MK-13 fan mount..
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We get it, you don't like aftermarker coolers. You unfortunately do not speak for all computer enthusiasts. Some people may like aftermarket coolers for the same reason they don't like buying pre-built computers in general. Some people may have bought a card with a reference nvidia cooler and decided that it is too loud or hot. While the gains they get from an aftermarket cooler may not outweigh the cons to you, it may be worth it to some people. |
In an age where advanced cooled GPUs cost the same/almost the same as referenced cooled ones, You have to be really not that smart to chose the reference one in the first place.
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Sure, some advanced cooled cards aren't that good. It's good we have the ability to choose a brand though, eh.
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but 20*C and silence is nothing to scoff at imho.
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My artic accellero dropped my sapphire dual x 7970 18c while overclocked.
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Does it come with a remote control? The worlds first flying dedicated GPU!
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