• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.
  • The forums have been upgraded with support for dark mode. By default it will follow the setting on your system/browser. You may override it by scrolling to the end of the page and clicking the gears icon.

Thermalright XP90-C

t_ski

Former Staff
Joined
Apr 11, 2006
Messages
11,941 (1.71/day)
System Name My i7 Beast
Processor Intel Core i7 6800K
Motherboard Asus X99-A II
Cooling Nickel-plated EK Supremacy EVO, D5 with XSPC Bayres & BIX Quad Radiator
Memory 4 x 8GB EVGA SuperSC DDR4-3200
Video Card(s) EVGA 1080 SuperClocked
Storage Samsung 950 Pro 256GB m.2 SSD + 480GB Sandisk storage SSD
Display(s) Three Asus 24" VW246H LCD's
Case Silverstone TJ07
Audio Device(s) Onboard
Power Supply Corsair AX1200
Keyboard Corsair K95
Software Windows 10 x64 Pro
Thermalright is one of the foremost cooling companies in the overclocking community. They have been around for many years providing that extra edge needed to keep your system cool. Although their lineup has changed quite a bit recently, many users out there are still cooling their CPUs with the Thermalright XP-90 and the XP-90C. Today we will take a look at the famous XP-90C and see what it can do in a current S939 setup.

Show full review
 
Last edited by a moderator:
that isn't a very good Stepping opteron u got there, 1.52v just to hit 2.7 ghz
I was wondering why your load temps were so high even with a XP90c 60c is terrible.
What is the ambient room temp? that should explain alot.

I got a 146 opteron that does 2.8ghz at 1.4-1.45v and I hit 50c full load with a XP90!

good review, and its still a excellent cooler, one thing u should have added is the weight of it. That is the reason I went with the XP90 and not the XP90C is almost double the weight. for only like 2-3c cooler temps cause of the cooper.

I also wished they would have made if compatible with AM2. U did make a good point tho, for its day it was tops, now there are comparable it not better coolers out.
 
No, it is a good stepping. I just wanted to keep the specs close to what w1zzard was using in his MiniTyphoon review. The CPU can actually hit close to 3.1GHz at the 1.525v in the article, and that is on the Big Typhoon. Unfortunately, even with the extra volts, the XP-90C wouldn't let me get 3.0 stable. And the weight was mentioned in the specs on the first page, but it was in grams (copies from the Thermailright site). The weight of the heatsink by itself is 690 grams, which converts to about 1.5 pounds. Finally, as mentioned in the article, room temperature was monitored at 26C + or - 1C. I have seen lots of reviews where ambient temps were below 20C. You always need to take the ambient temp into consideration when comparing the performance of a heatsink in a review, that's why I listed it.
 
UPDATE (July 11, 2006): Thermalright has brought to my attention that they will be releasing a new AM2 RM (Rev.B) that will allow the XP-90C to be compatible with the new AMD AM2 platform. This RM is slated to be released soon (August 2006). This will allow current and future owners of the XP-90 and XP-90C to use them in their new AM2 systems for an additional cost of only $3 USD.
 
Whooosh... look @ that "monster"!

:)

* Thermalright is usually way up there on quality &/or performance iirc, year-in & year-out, if not "THE" top performer!

(Can't go too far wrong using their stuff imo... wish I had one myself! Almost got the 120 model here, but backed out @ last second & opted for another type (wish I hadn't)).

APK
 
Back
Top