I just finished putting a new system together tonight. I have a 3.2GHz Pentium 4 and I put it into a Asus P4C800 Deluxe. At first I used the Intel retail heatsink/fan that came with my older 2.4GHz Pentium 4, but now that I have sold the old CPU, the heatsink needed to go with it. Besides the temperatures were reaching 49C (during the demo for Tron 2.0) and the heatsink was almost too hot to touch at that point.
So I bought a Zalman CNPS7000A from Newegg. I bought it entirely because they advertise it as being very quiet and because it's one of the few that explicitly says that it supports 3.2GHz. It arrived today, and I just finished putting it in.
My first impression upon unpacking it was that it was very pretty and much heavier than I thought it would be. The bottom of the heatsink is a very flat, shiny surface that formed a vacuum seal to the CPU the first time that I put the two together - no grease, nothing. Installation was ok. The included thermal grease is a little more liquid than I am used to, and I was actually more pleased with it than others that I have used. Getting the screws into the little crossbars was trickier than I thought that it would be - especially while moving the screwdriver through the blades of the fan.
Once I turned it on, I was certainly impressed. It is far quieter than the retail heatsink/fan with the fan speed maxed out - I haven't even tried the included fan speed dial. And the temperatures at idle (@1.5V @ 3.2GHz) are an almost unbelieveable 32C - with the room being about 23C right now. Under load (the Tron 2.0 demo), the max temperature dropped to 41C - down from 49C on the retail under the same task.
Overall an impressive heatsink and a fairly easy installation - although this is only in comparison with my experiences with an older retail.
Now I just need to find a way to cool down my memory... those things get hot. And they are only DDR266. I have to wonder how much hotter DDR400 would be.
So I bought a Zalman CNPS7000A from Newegg. I bought it entirely because they advertise it as being very quiet and because it's one of the few that explicitly says that it supports 3.2GHz. It arrived today, and I just finished putting it in.
My first impression upon unpacking it was that it was very pretty and much heavier than I thought it would be. The bottom of the heatsink is a very flat, shiny surface that formed a vacuum seal to the CPU the first time that I put the two together - no grease, nothing. Installation was ok. The included thermal grease is a little more liquid than I am used to, and I was actually more pleased with it than others that I have used. Getting the screws into the little crossbars was trickier than I thought that it would be - especially while moving the screwdriver through the blades of the fan.
Once I turned it on, I was certainly impressed. It is far quieter than the retail heatsink/fan with the fan speed maxed out - I haven't even tried the included fan speed dial. And the temperatures at idle (@1.5V @ 3.2GHz) are an almost unbelieveable 32C - with the room being about 23C right now. Under load (the Tron 2.0 demo), the max temperature dropped to 41C - down from 49C on the retail under the same task.
Overall an impressive heatsink and a fairly easy installation - although this is only in comparison with my experiences with an older retail.
Now I just need to find a way to cool down my memory... those things get hot. And they are only DDR266. I have to wonder how much hotter DDR400 would be.
