Socket-A Cooler Roundup: September 2001
by Tillmann Steinbrecher on September 7, 2001 3:19 AM EST- Posted in
- Cases/Cooling/PSUs
Zalman CNPS3100 and CNPS3100 Gold (continued)
When looking at the pictures on the last page, you might be wondering: Where
is the fan? The fan is a separate part. Let's have a look at how the cooler
looks when it is installed:
One of the problems related to this design is that depending
on where on the motherboard the CPU is located, the fan might or might not
blow directly on the cooler. On the other hand, it some cases the fan also
provides some airflow to the chipset's north bridge.
Installation
The CNPS3100 cooler come with a standard clip which uses just
two of the six cleat s on the socket. Since the heavy fan assembly isn't fixed
to the CPU socket, but directly to the case, the risk of breaking off the
heatsink when moving around the PC is small.
Performance and noise, conclusion
Both the CNPS3100 and the CNPS3100 Gold performed exactly on par with one
another, as expected. The cooling performance is disappointing - but CNPS (which
stands for Computer Noise Prevention System) is about low noise and not about
high cooling performance.
With the included adapter - which simply consists of two plugs, three wires
and a resistor - the fan voltage can be lowered; the CNPS will then run in "noiseless
mode". The expression "noiseless" isn't a marketing hype - it is simply true.
In noiseless mode, the CNPS3001 is the quietest cooler we've ever tested (interesting
detail: when the fan is mounted vertically, it is even a little quieter than
when it's mounted horizontally). When the fan alone runs in an otherwise silent
room, you really have to listen carefully to hear it, and when the cooler is
installed in the case, it is absolutely unhearable.
The cooling performance in "noiseless mode", however, is even more disappointing.
If you plan to buy the fastest AMD CPU on the market, or if you even have overclocking
plans, then the CNPS3001 isn't for you. However, even in noiseless mode,
the CNPS3001 will provide just enough cooling to keep a 1GHz Athlon (Thunderbird),
or a 1.2GHz Athlon MP (Palomino). So if you have such a CPU - or a a slower
one - then the CNPS3001 can be a good choice. Again, this cooler isn't
just quiet, it's silent. It is also a good choice for noise-conscious users
of non-overclocked Celeron and P3 CPUs - the cooling requirements of current
Intel CPUs are not as high as of their AMD counterparts. In any case, check
case and motherboard compability before buying this cooler. If it doesn't fit
your motherboard, it will perform even worse than it already does.
Zalman CNPS3100 (Gold) |
Fan: Zalman 80mm
Price: Gold version:
a little over $42, copper version cheaper |
Advantages |
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Disadvantages |
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