Originally posted by: Jhhnn
Not even in your wildest dreams, Mikewarrior2. Heat output is measured in btu/hr, calories/minute, watts/ any length of time you'd care to choose. Time being the part you're forgetting. If the cpu is putting out the same amount of heat over a given period of time, regardless of the hsf employed, then where would that heat go, other than out the case exhaust? The actual amount of heat dissipated must be the same, otherwise the cpu temp would continue to rise until it fried. The reason that the heat dissipation remains the same is because the temperature differential between the cpu and the air increases with the lesser hsf until a point is reached where that difference allows sufficient heat transfer to achieve equilibrium.
Think of it like this- two buckets, one taller than the other. Run water continuously (heat) into both of them at the same rate, let it overflow over the tops(case exhaust fan). Measure the height of the water in the buckets(cpu temp). Even though the height of the water is different, the flow rate is the same. HVAC 101.