View allAll Photos Tagged CPUCooler
MM - The Periodic Table - 5709
13 Al Aluminium
29 Cu Copper
What it is?
It`s the bottom of a CPU Cooler. The surface should be absolutely flat and polished, but getting close you can see it isn't.
HMM!
Copyright © 2021 by Craig Paup. All rights reserved.
Any use, printed or digital, in whole or edited, requires my written permission.
Today is System Administrator Appreciation Day. A big THANK YOU to all system administrators who keep our systems up and running! :-)
I took this snapshot showing the innards of my newish computer case, through the glass side panel. I recently upgraded the heat sink to a monster cooler unit (a Scythe Mugen 5 Rev.B), to which I added a second fan with green LEDs for "push-pull" cooling.
After playing with the photo a bit in Snapseed, I got this sort of abstract looking image that I thought looked pretty cool. Why yes, I am a geek. :)
Three shot H.D.R. of Sandra's new cooler couple of layers of fractalius and a few masks.
Please do not use any of my images without my permission, thank you.
I have been buying computer parts on ebay for many years, usually cleaning and/or fixing anything that is not up to standard. Never have I seen such a filthy part. The bottom part of the pic shows a CPU heatsink & fan assembly which has been exposed to tobacco smoke (probably for years). Needless to say, it stank strongly of the stuff. The top part of the picture shows a similar (clean) part for comparison.
This is also the first time I binned a working computer part rather than cleaning it!
A series of three shots of a computer CPU cooler, with the flash in varying positions. This one, the first of the three, has the flash at the upper left of the lens. The 35mm film can is for scale. Taken in my "studio" in Albany, CA by a Nikon D610 at ISO 400 with a Nikkor 28-80mm ƒ 3.3-5.6 AF-D G lens. (at 80) A Nikon SB-300 flash was used with the SC-28 sync cord
A series of three shots of a computer CPU cooler, with the flash in varying positions. This one, the second of the three, has the flash at the lower left of the lens, slightly below the surface's height. The 35mm film can is for scale. Taken in my "studio" in Albany, CA by a Nikon D610 at ISO 400 with a Nikkor 28-80mm ƒ 3.3-5.6 AF-D G lens. A Nikon SB-300 flash was used with the SC-28 sync cord
A series of three shots of a computer CPU cooler, with the flash in varying positions. This one, the third of the three, has the flash bouncing off the (pink!) ceiling. The 35mm film can is for scale. Taken in my "studio" in Albany, CA by a Nikon D610 at ISO 400 with a Nikkor 28-80mm ƒ 3.3-5.6 AF-D G lens. A Nikon SB-300 flash was used with the SC-28 sync cord.
This got out of order at the "posting to Flickr®" stage...
My new case is so well ventilated that it passes all the dust straight thru the fans and onto the CPU heatsink. Marvellous. This is 9 months worth of dust.
Here the CPU cooler are blowing air though the cobber heat pips that are running down along the CPU. The fan in the back and above is sucking air out of the cabinet.
Second stage of my PC build included installation of the following:
CPU: INTEL Core2Duo E6850 3000 LGA775 4MB ATX
Motherboard: ASUS P5K Premium/WIFI-AP Socket775 FSB1333 ATX P35 RAID PCI-Express
CPU cooler: ZALMAN CNPS 9700 LED
RAM: KINGSTON 2GB RAMKit 2x1GB DDR2 PC2-8500 1066MHz nonECC 5-5-5-15
Harddisk: WD Raptor 74GB HDD 10000rpm SATA serial ATA 16MB cache 3.5" internal RoHS compliant
Soundcard: CREATIVE Sound Blaster X-Fi Xtreme Gamer
All that is missing is the graphiccard.
Something that I didn't realize when absorbing the widespread assumption that hot, fast CPUs should really have aftermarket coolers: this violates the CPU manufacturer's warranty. Oops. But at this point I was committed, and the aftermarket cooler really did look more capable of sucking up to 100 Watts of waste heat from an area much smaller than the hot surface of a 100 Watt light bulb. And without stopping to check the fine print yet one more time, how long could the warranty be, anyway? About 15 minutes?
Speculating on the likelihood of lying my way to warranty coverage in the unlikely event of a CPU failure (especially given my intent of posting photos like this one online), I went to work.
I don't recall if the fine print said I would trash my warranty as soon as I assembled these components, or when I flipped the power switch.
www.flickr.com/photos/jjldickinson/8617089667/ and www.flickr.com/photos/jjldickinson/8617088547/ show the cooler that came with the CPU.
09080002-84.jpg
Der Boxed-Kühler vom Ryzan 5 ist nur 57mm hoch und daher sehr gut für Micro ATX Desktop-Gehäuse ( z.B. MS-Tech CA- 011. ) geeignet.
Für den CPU-Kühler "Alpenphön Panorama" benötigt man bei Verwendung eines Motherboards mit AM4-Sockel ein AM4 Upgrade Kit.
www.ocinside.de/test/amd_am4_cooler_d/
PS: Auf Anfrage teilte EKL mit, das es keinen Upgrade-Kit AM4 für den Alpenphön Panorama geben wird !
Finally got round to cleaning the Dell XPS 720 I bought from one of my colleagues. A friend of mine helped me disassembling the beast of a machine. This is the CPU cooler with a 120mm fan and shroud attached. Again, I cleaned everything under the water faucet.
Dave is doing a little CPU upgrading and yesterday took delivery of thos absolutely outrageous CPU cooler.
It's the size of a small country and has two embedded inline fans.
What struck me was the tubing on the top which reminded me of the sort of beautiful exhaust manifolds that you got on old V12 Duesenbergs and cars of that ilk.
copyright © 2008 sean dreilinger
view quiet side of the supermicro active heatsinks - _MG_1430 on a black background.
It is very easy to work with the Harddisk box where it is possible to install up to four Harddisks. The box can be taken out, then connect all the cables, and then re-install the box in is proper place.
Second stage of my PC build included installation of the following:
CPU: INTEL Core2Duo E6850 3000 LGA775 4MB ATX
Motherboard: ASUS P5K Premium/WIFI-AP Socket775 FSB1333 ATX P35 RAID PCI-Express
CPU cooler: ZALMAN CNPS 9700 LED
RAM: KINGSTON 2GB RAMKit 2x1GB DDR2 PC2-8500 1066MHz nonECC 5-5-5-15
Harddisk: WD Raptor 74GB HDD 10000rpm SATA serial ATA 16MB cache 3.5" internal RoHS compliant
Soundcard: CREATIVE Sound Blaster X-Fi Xtreme Gamer
All that is missing is the graphiccard.
Second stage of my PC build included installation of the following:
CPU: INTEL Core2Duo E6850 3000 LGA775 4MB ATX
Motherboard: ASUS P5K Premium/WIFI-AP Socket775 FSB1333 ATX P35 RAID PCI-Express
CPU cooler: ZALMAN CNPS 9700 LED
RAM: KINGSTON 2GB RAMKit 2x1GB DDR2 PC2-8500 1066MHz nonECC 5-5-5-15
Harddisk: WD Raptor 74GB HDD 10000rpm SATA serial ATA 16MB cache 3.5" internal RoHS compliant
Soundcard: CREATIVE Sound Blaster X-Fi Xtreme Gamer
All that is missing is the graphiccard.