The system we used for testing comprised of an Intel Core i7 920 CPU on an Asus P6T motherboard. For our tests we replaced the preapplied Arctic Cooling MX-2 thermal paste with MX-3.
Test System
Coolers: Arctic Cooling Freezer Xtreme (Rev.2), Arctic Cooling Freezer 7 Pro (Rev.2) (Review)
Chassis: Thermaltake Level 10
Processor: Intel Core i7 920 (D0)
Motherboard: Asus P6T
Memory: 6GB (3x 2GB) Corsair Dominator DDR3-1600 RAM
Storage: Samsung SpinPoint F3 1TB 7200rpm (HD103SJ)
Power Supply: Corsair HX850W
Windows 7 Home Premium (64-bit)
We noted a 6c improvement in performance over the Freezer Xtreme's little brother, the Arctic Cooling Freezer 7 Pro, under load. Despite this, the Freezer 7 Pro was able to achieve a 2c lower idle temperature. We managed to achieve a decent overclock of 3.8GHz within tolerable temperatures with the Xtreme which is reasonably impressive for cooler of this price.
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These coolers are such good value, how would it compare to the 38 quid Thermaltake Frio you reckon? any ideas?
very good pricing as always from arctic cooling. I still cant over that extreme solution KitGuru tested for the 5870 last week. serious performance.
I would say this might be quite close in performance to the frio, slightly weaker, but close enough to warrant the 10-12 price difference 🙂
wonder why they didn’t go for the direct touch heatpipe design.
I have always bought arctic cooling products, they are so competitive priced and last a long time. this is great.
I like this design, their quality is very high for the price points they achieve. very good value product this. 28 quid now is cheap for a high end cooler.
the only problem I have with arctic cooling is their cheap packaging. our postmen here wreck everything. they need to get stronger boxes.
Hmmmmm
Push pins for a cooler branded “Xtreme”
*FAIL*
Point is well made Fisshy, only thing I will say is that many people actually like this as they dont have to mess around with backplates. its always been an arctic cooling design decision.
I have to agree with Fisshy. for an extreme cooler you just cant get the same mounting pressure as a dedicated backplate design.
What is the sound “quality” for this cooler?
I know that their fans are very quiet but not that good @ air flow not to mention static pressure…
The fan isn’t as quiet as a noctua and doesn’t seem to shift a lot of air. But it isn’t intrusive, especially if you use PWM.
Hmmm…
and I thought that arctic cooling fans were quieter than the noctua…
Its an interesting point Jordan. I know a lot of people find Noctua fans irritating – MKK for instance on the forums pointed out that the specific tone that noctua fans produce, annoy him. I find noctua fans very quiet myself but perhaps everyone has a different view on this. We will look at getting Henry a noise meter shortly for more analysis on these reviews. The arctic cooling freezer (not the extreme) I have here is reasonably quiet, their fans are normally quite good.
Indeed, fans noise is very subjective
I have only one noctua on my system – NF-P12. though very good fan I find its sound just OK… not pleasant but not too irritating too. I use it as front intake on my case.
I have 2 akasa apache and I find those bit better – air flow wise and noise wise. they are strapped on my IFX-14 (since they are PWM).
I also have scythe slip stream (exhaust) and 2 scythe s-flex (top exhaust) so all in all, system is cooling nice and it is not that noisy (for 8 fans in total – didn’t mentioned bottom intake slip stream and side panel scythe kaze mary).
I had my own fan research some time ago and those fans were the result out of it… 😀
Conning the advertisers with the impression of more hits than you really get?
You force me to look at 5 small pages rather than let me see one page.