Seconded. Buy the OEM version of the E6300 and put the money saved towards an AC7Pro.PaulProteus said:This seems as a good option.
http://www.overclockers.co.uk/showproduct.php?prodid=HS-017-AR
yeah you could do that or just buy the retail version for the re-sell value . . . The cost difference between the two is a few quidSnapshot said:Seconded. Buy the OEM version of the E6300 and put the money saved towards an AC7Pro.
Jonathan
Cob said:The stock heatsink is crap for anything over stock speeds.
area512003 said:UNTRUE!![]()
I have an E6300 using the standard Intel heatsink & fan overclocked @ 2.5GHz (358FSB x 7) and it is 28C idle and 42C load!!![]()
Depends what the 'test' conditions are, if he has the case side off and its sitting next to an open window . . .Nuttah said:Hmmm...find that hard to believe
Big.Wayne said:Depends what the 'test' conditions are, if he has the case side off and its sitting next to an open window . . .![]()
Nuttah said:Hmmm...find that hard to believe. What you using to read that?
As for my experience, I could overclock using the stock cooler, however, once I started going for 2.5ghz+ the temps under load were hitting over 60 degress - which worried me a little, so I cut back until I got a better cooler.
I really wouldn't reccomend going for too much with stock cooler, get yourself either a Tuniq Tower or Freezer 7 if on a budget.
Have you heard of 'overcooling' before?area512003 said:blah, blah, blah![]()
area512003 said:Hmmmmm MSI's own Core centre software, Everest, Motherboard monitor, speed fan, blah, blah, blah show identical temps.![]()
I heard these names banded around before, what are they? got any linkage plsNuttah said:Not sure about Everest but the rest read of them read temps from a different sensor then to that of Coretemp or TAT
Big.Wayne said:Have you heard of 'overcooling' before?![]()
Big.Wayne said:I heard these names banded around before, what are they? got any linkage pls![]()
area512003 said:Yes. I have heard of overcooling.
Overcooling a system can lead to problems due to differential shrinkage rates. At the same temperature, different materials shrink or expand at different rates. Metals vs plastics vs composites have different physical characteristics, which can cause serious physical strains at best. Differntial component shrinkage rates can lead to significant strain on the MoBo and components attached to it.
And this is before i get into the issue of condensation on the components of an agressive coolling system. And where is this condensation on the tubing and cooling blocks going to go, I wonder.
First, peltier and phase change systems are somewhat esoteric to bring up in this discussion. Liquid cooling systems have some interesting condensation issues which are almost never raised.
For example, Prometia's "Stage Phase Cooling". Overcooling can cause condensation to form on the hardware. Therefore, I have a stonkin' large de-humidifier in the room my PC sits in so condensation hopefully does not become a factor.![]()
But we are talking serious overcooling like Cryogenic temperatures, say on the order of LN2 or LHe, could damage a CPU if not done properly.![]()
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Nuttah said:You been reading Wikipedia?So what cooling you actually got then?