I'm not sure if anyone has this, but I received a Intel Pentium E5200(45nm) yesterday.
I was expecting a RCBFH like the one reviewed here:
http://www.frostytech.com/arti...iew.cfm?articleID=2335
but alas, it seems as if Intel has cut some corners.
Firstly, lets take a look at the overall package. You can see that the E5200 heatsink is different off the bat. It still uses the 85mmx85mmx25mm 0.6Amp fan from the previous unit, but there is now about half as much aluminum as before. The total height of the entire heatsink/fan is only about 45mm now instead of 63mm.
Now onto the heatsink itself. As you could see from the previous review, the fins come off of an aluminum slug at the center as an heat spreading core. The new E5200 heatink no longer has it, the heatsink now has just an hollow aluminum core that the fins seem machined from.
Flipping it over, we can see the thermal paste and aluminum base. One again, the base on the previous review is machined to a smooth finish. On the other hand, the E5200 heatsink has an obviously unfinished bottom. It compares to the stock HSF of the AMD Athlon 64 S939 heatsinks. The texture is about as close to brushed aluminum as you can get. Furthermore, the thermal paste is difficult to spread, with incredibly high viscosity.
Now onto temperature numbers. I installed the heatsink in a Tuniq 3 case with 3 120mm fans at 1200rpm(1 intake, 1 exhaust, 1 in side panel, blowing on cpu), and a Radeon 4870. Room temperature is 22*C ambient in case idle temps stay around 36*C. At idle, the results look acceptable. The idle temp is 46*C, but at load, the temperature shoots up to 69*C at stock vcore and frequencies. These temperatures were recorded with the fan locked at 100% RPM(2000rpm +-75)
I didn't believe the results at first so I removed the heatsink and reinstalled it 3 times with the same results. A mild vcore bump(in bios) from 1.1625 to 1.225(1.13-1.19 after vdroop) and frequency bump from 2500mhz to 3000mhz raised load temps to 81*C.
So my conclusion is this; If you are buying a retail low end intel processor, do not count on the stock HSF even at stock. Make sure you get an aftermarket heatsink because imo, the intel heatsink isn't to be trusted with anything over a Pentium II.
I was expecting a RCBFH like the one reviewed here:
http://www.frostytech.com/arti...iew.cfm?articleID=2335
but alas, it seems as if Intel has cut some corners.
Firstly, lets take a look at the overall package. You can see that the E5200 heatsink is different off the bat. It still uses the 85mmx85mmx25mm 0.6Amp fan from the previous unit, but there is now about half as much aluminum as before. The total height of the entire heatsink/fan is only about 45mm now instead of 63mm.
Now onto the heatsink itself. As you could see from the previous review, the fins come off of an aluminum slug at the center as an heat spreading core. The new E5200 heatink no longer has it, the heatsink now has just an hollow aluminum core that the fins seem machined from.
Flipping it over, we can see the thermal paste and aluminum base. One again, the base on the previous review is machined to a smooth finish. On the other hand, the E5200 heatsink has an obviously unfinished bottom. It compares to the stock HSF of the AMD Athlon 64 S939 heatsinks. The texture is about as close to brushed aluminum as you can get. Furthermore, the thermal paste is difficult to spread, with incredibly high viscosity.
Now onto temperature numbers. I installed the heatsink in a Tuniq 3 case with 3 120mm fans at 1200rpm(1 intake, 1 exhaust, 1 in side panel, blowing on cpu), and a Radeon 4870. Room temperature is 22*C ambient in case idle temps stay around 36*C. At idle, the results look acceptable. The idle temp is 46*C, but at load, the temperature shoots up to 69*C at stock vcore and frequencies. These temperatures were recorded with the fan locked at 100% RPM(2000rpm +-75)
I didn't believe the results at first so I removed the heatsink and reinstalled it 3 times with the same results. A mild vcore bump(in bios) from 1.1625 to 1.225(1.13-1.19 after vdroop) and frequency bump from 2500mhz to 3000mhz raised load temps to 81*C.
So my conclusion is this; If you are buying a retail low end intel processor, do not count on the stock HSF even at stock. Make sure you get an aftermarket heatsink because imo, the intel heatsink isn't to be trusted with anything over a Pentium II.
